February 3, 2017

Page 1

going green

valentine’s day treats

fresh fragrances

COLOR OF THE YEAR

SWEETS FOR SWEETIES

WEBSTER WAX

Style. Society. Success. | February 3, 2017

Celebrating 20 Years of Inspiring Children to Become Readers


The LUXURY COLLECTION of

Alliance Real Estate

14 McKnight Lane | Ladue | $799,000

Stone Ledge Farm - 196 Acres Dutzow | $3,675,000

508 Heron Court

Saint Albans | $2,750,000

Lot 2 Georgian Acres

16901 Pacland Ridge Drive

16763 Eagle Bluff Court

9 Washington Terrace

14 Greenbriar Drive

22 Heather Hill Lane

Wenwood Farm Winery Bland | $1,200,000

626 Morel Court

Saint Albans | $1,199,900

18038 Homestead Manor

244 Bless Us Court East

August Tavern Creek Lot 25

970 Tara Oaks Drive

115 Club Creek Court

486 Pine Bend Drive

14 Stacy Drive

17669 Lasiandra Drive

974 Silver Buck

9445 Highway AN - 93 Acres

Central West End | $1,450,000

Wildwood | $1,149,000

Wildwood | $850,000

Ladue | $1,300,000

Wentzville | $989,990

Olivette | $849,000

Frontenac | $2,186,500

Olivette | $1,289,900

Wildwood | $969,990

Wildwood | $819,900

Chesterfield | $1,990,000

Chesterfield | $899,900

Chesterfield | $795,892

Visit www.stlopens.com to view weekend open houses

Chesterfield | $1,695,000

Saint Albans | $875,000

Rosebud | $511,500

www.bhhsall.com 8077 Maryland Avenue | Clayton | 314-997-7600 17050 Baxter Road #200 | Chesterfield | 636-537-0300 Relocation | 636-733-5010

©2017 BHHS Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchises of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.® Equal Housing Opportunity


FEATURED LUXURY SPECIALISTS of

Kim Jones

Patershuk Partners

Diane Patershuk: 314-477-7673 Rod Patershuk: 314-477-7674 www.PatershukPartners.com

314-323-6909 www.kimjonessellsstlhomes.com

1520 Ann Avenue

Kirkwood | Represented Buyer

Alliance Real Estate

2742 Wynncrest Manor

Chesterfield | Represented Buyer

I consider it an honor to know a client trusts my professional opinion and representation. It is a privilege to assist families with such important decisions. Providing exceptional client service is my first priority!

115 Pointer Lane Ladue | $984,500

Amy Goffstein

Land | Litwack & Associates

314-712-0599 www.AmyGoffstein.com

314-872-6716 www.LandLitwack.com

41 Woodcrest Drive Ladue | $2,125,000

997 Tara Oaks Drive Chesterfield | $1,049,000

Visit www.stlopens.com to view weekend open houses

www.bhhsall.com 8077 Maryland Avenue | Clayton | 314-997-7600 17050 Baxter Road #200 | Chesterfield | 636-537-0300 Relocation | 636-733-5010

Š2017 BHHS Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchises of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.Ž Equal Housing Opportunity


GATHERINGS & GOODWILL 16 18 20

Pujols Family Foundation COPE24 Urban League of Metropolitan St. Louis

21 22

Holiday House Upcoming Gatherings

ABODE 26 27 28

The Trio: Cabin Comforts Design Destination Feature: Pantone Color of the Year

79

28

HEALTHY VALENTINE’S DAY

PANTONE COLOR OF THE YEAR

With Cupid’s annual lovefest fast approaching, writer/photographer Sherrie Castellano shares with LN’s readers recipes for five neat treats designed to sate your sweet tooth and your sugar’s – without risking hyperglycemia.

If you’ve already long since wearied of winter’s palette of gray and gray and (you guessed it!) gray, LN’s longtime Trio titan Nancy Robinson should brighten your day with this springy feature on Pantone’s 2017 Color of the Year: Greenery.

Abode:

LN SPECIAL SECTION: WE LOVE OUR NEIGHBORHOODS

31

To accompany portraits shot by staff photographer Sarah Conroy and others, LN stalwart Denise Kruse and ace intern Kaitlynn Martin introduce our readers to families in 19 neighborhoods in St. Louis and St. Louis County.

Ready Readers celebrates 20 years of helping young children set out on a path of success in the world, built on understanding language. Find out more on page 14. Pictured are Ellicia Qualls, director and owner of Urban Sprouts, with Ready Readers volunteer Tina Rafael. Photo by Sarah Conroy.

2 2

FEBRUARY 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com FEBRUARY 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

LN Special Section: We Love Our Neighborhoods

Arts & Culture Feature:

Abode Feature:

On the cover 14

31

STYLE 56 57 60

On Trend Feature: Webster Wax Beauty Buzz

THE DAILY 66 67 67 68

Game ON! Kids MD Crossword Puzzle Feature: Shared Parenting

ARTS & CULTURE 76 78 79 82

Dinner & A Show Art and Soul Feature: Healthy Valentine’s Day Around Town


Music To Make Hearts ts Sing S Music provides therapeutic benefits in memory care by stimulating every part of the brain. Music Therapy is one of the tools we use every day to provide the highest-quality care for our Residents. Because every moment matters.

Leading the way in Memory Care. 605 Coeur De Ville Dr. F Creve Coeur, MO 63141 F ParcProvence.com To learn more or schedule a tour, call Karen at (314) 542-2500 We are committed to equal housing opportunity that does not discriminate in housing and services because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin.


VICE PRESIDENT OF NICHE PUBLISHING

GENERAL MANAGER

Catherine Neville

Andrea Griffith

cneville@laduenews.com

agriffith@laduenews.com

EDITORIAL SENIOR EDITOR

Liz Miller : lmiller@laduenews.com MANAGING EDITOR

Alecia Humphreys : ahumphreys@laduenews.com COPY EDITOR & STAFF WRITER

Bryan A. Hollerbach : bhollerbach@laduenews.com ASSOCIATE EDITOR

Bethany Christo : bchristo@laduenews.com STAFF WRITER

Amanda Dahl : adahl@laduenews.com DIGITAL EDITOR & STAFF WRITER

Presented by

Robyn Dexter : rdexter@laduenews.com STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Sarah Conard : sconard@laduenews.com CONTRIBUTING WRITERS

Mark Bretz, Julia Cain, Sherrie Castellano, Frank Cusumano, Kimmie Gotch, Dr. Joseph Kahn, Denise Kruse, Nancy Robinson, Katie Yeadon

St. Louis’ most affluent audience of tastemakers and trendsetters are choosing the area’s top businesses to make the annual Ladue News Platinum List. Help us celebrate the winners and runners up at our Platinum List party.

EDITORIAL INTERN

Kaitlynn Martin CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS

David Anderson, Diane Anderson, Sherrie Castellano, Bryan Schraier

ADVERTISING OPERATIONS MANAGER

Andi Kozak : akozak@laduenews.com

• Enjoy live music • Sample savory bites and tasty treats • Visit the open bar with signature drinks from St. Louis’ top mixologists • Shop local retailers

ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES

Lauren Dunning : ldunning@laduenews.com Kayla Nelms : knelms@laduenews.com Tom Palmier : tpalmier@laduenews.com Ann Sutter : asutter@laduenews.com CLASSIFIED ACCOUNT MANAGER

Lisa Taylor : ltaylor@lee.net

CREATIVE ART DIRECTOR

Take home a complimentary gift bag

Dawn Deane : ddeane@laduenews.com

ComplimenTary valeT parking

Timothy Brashares Lauren Ellsworth Andrew Nelms

Thursday, March 2, 2017 6-9pm | Palladium Saint Louis

GRAPHIC DESIGNERS

ADMINISTRATION OFFICE MANAGER

Megan Langford : mlangford@laduenews.com

CONTACT

Tickets $40 | $45 at door

8811 Ladue Road, Suite D, Ladue, Missouri 63124 314-863-3737 : LadueNews.com

To purchase tickets, go to

SUBSCRIPTIONS

www.laduenews.com and click on the link. Follow us on

4   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

Ladue News publishes 52 issues per year. Subscriptions cost $45 in the continental U.S. A SUBURBAN JOURNALS OF GREATER ST. LOUIS LLC PUBLICATION, A DIVISION OF LEE ENTERPRISES



Play Better Golf! Feb. 10- 12 St. Charles Convention Center Fri. 11am - 5pm • Sat. 10am - 5pm Sun. 10am - 4pm

FRONT DOOR

FREEBIES

contributors

meet our

What feature of your own city or nabe (see p. 31) most pleases you?

Presented By

SARAH CONROY

Free Round: • Osage National • The Lodge of Four Seasons • Old Kinderhook

I live in the Southampton neighborhood, which has become quite the dining destination. … We’re anxiously

4-Some: • Oak Terrace Resort & Spa • Sun Valley • Deer Creek USA

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& TRY NEW CLUBS

All Attendees Restrictions Apply

awaiting the arrival of Clementine’s Creamery, though having delicious ice cream mere blocks away will be a little rough on the diet!

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• Golf Digest 1-Year subscription w/paid admission

$7 VALUE

Oh, man, what can I actually say about O’Fallon? Price

GREAT DEALS ON GOLF GEAR

per square footage isn’t an exciting reason to choose the neighborhood – maybe I can cheat and claim Cottleville. It’s close enough and has better food.

Win a Golf Vacation from

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THIS IS

Mason Pointe

Now in Town & Country, find the quality care your loved one needs. As a new Lutheran Senior Services community, Mason Pointe offers convenience and value with over 155 years of experience. Now Available: Assisted Living, Long Term Care, and REACH Short Stay Rehabilitation Coming Soon: Memory Care Assisted Living Future Development: Independent Living Apartment Homes

Call 314.392.6363 to Schedule a Personal Tour! Visit all our Lutheran Senior Services communities at LSSLiving.org 13190 S. Outer Forty Rd. | Chesterfield, MO 63017 314.434.3330 | MasonPointeLiving.org

6   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com


29 THe BOULevARd · CLAYTON · 314·725·5100

|

LAURAMCCARTHY.COM

|

2730 NORTH BALLAS Rd · TOWN & COUNTRY · 314·569·1177

Featured Listings 1. 26 Countryside Lane · Frontenac This gracious home features 6+ bedrooms, 6 full and 5 half baths, first floor master suite with sitting room and palatial walk-in closet, generously sized formal living room and dining room, gourmet kitchen with hearth room, lower level complete with a kitchen, plus there is a large utility/mud room, walled courtyard, pool and three car garage. $2,395,000 4. 419 Polo Drive · Clayton

1. 26 Countryside Lane · Frontenac

2. 1831 Camberly Road · Des Peres Looking for fun and relaxation in 2017? Imagine a saltwater pool, a spa steps away from the master and a fire pit for relaxing on cool evenings. This gorgeous ranch features this plus a Chef’s kitchen, wine room, study and office. A great family home or luxurious living for a “downsizer.” $1,090,000 3. 1833 Bopp Road · Des Peres Classic and comfortable, this timeless design and style will meet the everyday needs of family living. With many recent updates, you will not be disappointed! $525,000

4. 419 Polo Drive · Clayton This charming home is in a prime location for taking advantage of many wonderful aspects of Clayton. Walkable to restaurants, 5. 200 S. Brentwood #15A · Clayton and one of the best elementary schools in the area. $949,000

2. 1831 Camberly Road · Des Peres

5. 200 South Brentwood #15A · Clayton This lovely corner unit with three bedrooms, panoramic views, and the bonus of a private terrace. The updated kitchen includes granite counters and custom cabinets. Both bathrooms have been renovated, custom closets throughout, and the convenience of in unit laundry. $315,000

3. 1833 Bopp Road · Des Peres Sunday Open Houses u12-2

1-3

2-4

MORe NeW LISTINgS 83 Frederick Lane (Glendale).

$239,999

OPEN SUNDAY 1-3! Tastefully updated with refinished hardwood floors, a wonderful family room with

6. 12512 Grandview Forest · Sunset Hills

$1,000,000 PLUS

$300,000 - $500,000

26 Countryside Lane (Frontenac).

$2,395,000

35 Chesterfield Lakes (Chesterfield).

$2,350,000

29 glenview Road (Ladue).

$2,350,000

3 Windsor Terrace Lane (Creve Coeur). $1,799,000

new bamboo floors, new kitchen tile and stainless

1123 Bella vista drive (Frontenac).

$1,539,000

appliances, plus a newer deck and patio. This home

35 Overhills drive (Ladue).

$1,575,000

is adjacent to common ground. Located in Webster

1126 Bella vista drive (Frontenac).

$1,310,000

1831 Camberly Road (des Peres).

$1,090,000

Schools, making this a wonderful home! 1517 Washington Ave. #302 (St. Louis). $349,000 Rare offering of a true loft featuring eight huge, south facing windows. Light filled great room with sound system through-out. Study with custom built-ins, exposed brick, and 100-year-old maple floors. gourmet kitchen with stainless appliances, gas range, and custom island plus breakfast bar. A gas fireplace practically heats the entire loft. 7119 Cambridge Ave. (University City).

$384,900

great University City home with hardwood floors flowing throughout the house. Includes four large bedrooms, a large living room, an eat-in-kitchen, a dining room and a deck and patio in the back for

$750,000 - $1,000,000 656 Brookhaven Court (Kirkwood).

$989,000

11734 Brookbend drive (des Peres).

$959,000

419 Polo drive (Clayton).

$949,000

1438 Country Lake estates (Chesterfield).$869,900 9858 Copper Hill Road (Ladue).

$869,900

5 Wendover drive (Ladue).

$835,000

150 dielman Road (Ladue).

$759,000

$500,000 - $750,000

24 enfield Road (Olivette).

$499,000

4942-44 McPherson Avenue (CWe).

$485,000

1017 Briley Street (St. Peters).

$399,500

7119 Cambridge Avenue (University City). $384,900 UNdeR $300,000 83 Frederick Lane (glendale).

$239,999

8369 Weber Terrace (Unic. St. Louis).

$239,900

9740 Old Warson (Rock Hill).

$192,499

9117 Meadowbrook (Overland). 45 Trent drive (Ladue). 1035 Price School Lane (Ladue).

$990,000

4 Clayprice Court (Ladue).

$795,000

200 South Brentwood #19A (Clayton).

$650,000

14304 Spyglass Ridge (Chesterfield).

$585,000

$729,999

522 Middleton Court (Kirkwood).

$529,000

500 North and South #106, (U City).

$399,900 $349,000

on a cul de sac of newer homes in an established master suite, four additional bedrooms and three full baths upstairs, and a bedroom and full bath in the walkout lower level. Four car porte cochere garage.

area MLS listings and their OPEN HOUSES

■ Access all of our listings and all other MLS listings from your

moblie http://mobile.lauramccarthy.com

CONdOS & vILLAS

$739,000

neighborhood. great space includes a main floor

■ Find and map all of our weekly OPEN HOUSES, all St. Louis

13447 Thornhill drive (Town and Country).$625,000

1402 Warson Oaks (Warson Woods).

in a prime location. It is situated on a 1.48-acre lot

MY LAURA MCCARTHY

$1,095,000

9362 Caddyshack (Sunset Hills).

$2,350,000

■ Save property searches and receive e-mail updates through

$89,500

easy entertainment. Partially finished lower level,

This beautiful Rehnquist custom designed home is

LAURAMCCARTHY.COM

LOTS ANd ACReAge

offering space for an additional family room. 29 Glenview Road (Ladue).

6. 12512 Grandview Forest · Sunset Hills Welcome home to this beautiful four bedroom, three and a half bath home. This home has an open floor plan with dramatic two story great room, stunning custom hearth room, kitchen and breakfast areas. This is a must see! $650,000

359 Bach Avenue (Kirkwood).

$729,000

1517 Washington Ave #302 (St. Louis).

12512 grandview Forest (Sunset Hills).

$650,000

630 emerson Road, #204 (Creve Coeur). $325,000

134 Babler Road (Town and Country).

$598,134

200 South Brentwood #15A (Clayton).

$315,000

1856 Ironstone Road (des Peres).

$584,000

4464 Lindell Unit 14, (St. Louis).

$295,000

665 Wyndham Crossing (des Peres).

$579,000

7747 Kingsbury #12 (Clayton).

$205,000

1833 Bopp Road (des Peres).

$525,000

1 Scenic Cove Lane (St. Charles).

$193,900

102 Conway Cove (Chesterfield).

$159,900

1856 Ironstone · Des Peres Picturesque two story brick colonial in Berkley Manor! Classic yet spacious floor plan, large kitchen with main floor laundry, warm family room with fireplace and beautiful living room. Plus four large bedrooms, two and a half baths! $584,000


1 Lot Remaining

Price: $1,100,000

Price: $600,000 I 1.89 Acres

9052 Clayton Road in Ladue Schools

21 Overbrook Drive in Ladue

This is a unique opportunity to build your dream home on a lovely lot in Ladue School District. This lot is the last remaining in an enclave of 3 new custom homes. This lot lends itself to many different styles of home and will easily accomodate a walkout lower level and a pool if desired. Amherst will make this the ultimate custom building experience! List price is an example only- sales price will be determined by final product.

A wonderful opportunity awaits the buyer of this gorgeous 1.8 acres situated at the north end of Overbrook Lane, which is known for its stately homes and sweeping lawns. A home once stood on this site, and although it has been cleared for many years, all of the mature trees have remained, giving the lot the privacy and established feel that today’s buyer want in a distinguished property.

Linda Benoist Listing Agent 314.504.5495

Lisa Coulter Listing Agent 314.941.2883

Laura Donovan Listing Agent 314.229.8978

Kathleen Lovett Listing Agent 314.610.7408

$1,149,900 I Bedrooms: 6 I Baths: 5.5 I Total Living Area: 6,802 Square Feet

Price: $2,389,500 I Bedrooms: 4 I Baths: 5.5 I Total Living Area: 8,956

1312 Eagle Winds Court in Chesterfield

505 Pheasant Run Circle in St. Albans

Spectacular floor plan in mint condition, this updated 1.5-story home brings understated elegance to a new level! Features include, renovated master bath, Timbertech low maintenance decking 2015, maple wood flooring on the main level, main floor master suite complete with sitting room, 3 gas fireplaces, hearth room, kitchen and breakfast room overlook level rear fenced yard complete with in ground saltwater pool, 2nd floor complete with 2 separate en suites, another 2 beds connected by a Jack & Jill bath, loft sitting area and spacious bonus room! There’s more... walkout lower level offers wet bar, bedroom, full bath and spacious family/rec room and plenty of storage!

SPECTACULAR VIEWS, PRIVACY, SECURITY come included with this estate home on 10 acres in the Bluffs of St. Albans. Custom-built in a small, gated part of the community of estate homes overlooking the Missouri River and wine country. Minutes away from the Platinum Country Club of St. Albans and its two championship golf courses. This is an oasis with all the amenities. Stone walls and floor-to-ceiling stone fireplaces throughout, iron-gated limestone front patio with elevated views and access from the dining room French doors. Gardens, a waterfall that runs into the pool and a vine covered gazebo. Main floor master boasts private study. New Bellaforte roof and exterior painted in 2015 and 5+ car garage.

Susan Hurley Listing Agent 314.308.6636

Melinda McCarthy Listing Agent 314.606.2180

janet mcafee inc. l 9889 clayton road l saint louis, missouri 63124 l 314.997.4800 I www.janetmcafee.com


NEW LiSTiNg | 770 Savannah Crossing Way Town & Country $629,900 Open 2/5, 12-2 PM

NEW LiSTiNg | 3926 Bouquet Road Pacific $535,000

NEW LiSTiNg | 1312 Eagle Winds Court Chesterfield $1,149,900

NEW LiSTiNg | 4437 mcPherson Avenue Cwe $524,500 Open 2/5, 1-3 PM

New LIstINgs 1312 EaglE Winds COURT, Chesterfield. Spectacular floor plan in great condition, this updated 1.5-story brings elegance to a new level. 6 bedrooms and 5.5 baths. $1,149,900 770 savannah CROssing Way, Town & Country. Exceptional wooded lot provides a premier location. 2 years old and better than new with owner enhancements. $629,900. Open 2/5, 12-2 PM 3926 BOUqUET ROad, Pacific. Charming atrium ranch on 4.5 acres. New master and secondary bath. New Deck, carpet and siding. Rockwood Schools. $535,000 4437 MCPhERsOn avEnUE, CWE. Handsome 1910 Tudor Revival residence situated on a deep terraced lot in the heart of the fashionable CWE. $524,500. Open 2/5, 1-3 PM

LuxuryCollection

742 Champeix Lane Creve Coeur $1,049,000

11 Upper Whitmoor Drive Weldon Spring $3,800,000

5105 lindEll BOUlEvaRd, CWE.

$1,495,000

3709 aRPEnT sTREET, St. Charles.

$299,750

37 PORTland PlaCE, CWE.

$1,450,000

12033 ROByn PaRK dRivE, Westwood.

$1,325,000

1211 haRMOny laKE dRivE, Cottleville.

$254,900

9044 ClayTOn ROad, Ladue Schools.

$1,299,000

213 TROOn COURT, St. Albans.

$1,249,000

9052 ClayTOn ROad, TBB, Richmond Heights.

8724 ROsaliE avEnUE, Brentwood.

$239,900

1614 BREdEll avEnUE, Richmond Heights.

$164,900

$1,100,000

1029 KinsTERn dRivE, Des Peres.

$159,900

770 savannah CROssing, Town & Country. 12-2 Pm 7214 MaRyland avEnUE, University City.

24 WEsT WindRUsh CREEK, Creve Coeur.

$1,095,000

7318 MElROsE, University City.

$149,900

64 BRiaRCliFF, Ladue.

$1,089,000

15 ladUE COURT, Creve Coeur.

$1,049,500

2532 FRanCEs avEnUE, St. Louis.

$126,900

742 ChaMPEix lanE, Creve Coeur.

$1,049,000

1172 URsUla avEnUE, University City.

$119,900

open Sunday, February 5th

4437 MCPhERsOn avEnUE, CWE.

CoNDomiNiUm/ViLLA HomES

RESiDENTiAL HomES 8 glEn CREEK lanE, Ladue.

$999,900

1401 WindgaTE Way lanE, Chesterfield.

$999,000

46 WEsTWOOd COURT, Town & Country.

$975,000

362 MERlOT lanE, St. Albans. 40 COnWay ClOsE, Ladue.

4218 WEsT PinE avEnUE, UniT a1, CWE.

$595,000

14370 sPyglass COURT, Chesterfield.

$525,000

$924,900

710 sOUTh hanlEy ROad, UniT 10a, Clayton.

$389,000

$864,900

1121 lOCUsT sTREET, #202, St. Louis.

$370,000

103 gRayBRidgE ROad, Ladue.

$795,000

500 nORTh and sOUTh ROad, #103, University City. $335,000

171 nORTh BEMisTOn avEnUE, Clayton.

$4,500,000

108 ClUB CREEK COURT, St. Albans.

$790,000

11 UPPER WhiTMOOR dRivE, Weldon Spring.

$3,800,000

2723 WynnCREsT ManOR, Wildwood.

$769,000

9 aRROWhEad EsTaTEs, Chesterfield.

$3,795,000

397 glEn hOllOW, St. Albans.

$724,900

11 BREnTMOOR PaRK, Clayton.

$3,775,000

450 MaPlE RisE PaTh, Chesterfield.

$680,000

1136 WashingTOn BOUlEvaRd, UniT 210, St. Louis. $149,900

8 FORdyCE lanE, Ladue.

$3,500,000

776 villagE viEW CiRClE, St. Albans.

$670,514

10367 OxFORd hill dRivE, UniT 11, Creve Coeur. $64,900

28 TWin sPRings lanE, Ladue.

$2,900,000

516 MaPlEviEW, University City.

$650,000

7749 KingsBURy, UniT 31, Clayton.

$220,000

561 saRah lanE, #304, Creve Coeur.

$209,000

241 lindEn avEnUE, Clayton.

$2,850,000

2224 divOT, Crystal Lake Park.

$649,000

3784 dOC saRgEnT ROad, Pacific.

$2,500,000

3609 BassETT WOOds dRivE, Pacific.

$599,000

2 FORdyCE lanE, Ladue.

$2,450,000

16411 FOREsT gaTE lanE, Wildwood.

$589,900

BlUFFs OF sT. alBans, St. Albans.

$2,389,500

4664 O’BannOn, Farmington.

$567,000

21 OvERBROOK dRivE, Ladue.

25 RandElay dRivE, Ladue.

$2,250,000

7214 MaRyland avEnUE, University City.

$550,000

1 TBB CaMPTOn aT villagE viEW, St. Albans.

$469,900

16052 aUTUMn OaKs CiRClE, Ellisville.

$459,900

9052 ClayTOn ROad, Richmond Heights.

$425,000

150 CaROndOlET Plaza, UniT 1701, Clayton. $2,200,000

visit us

20 FORdyCE lanE, Ladue.

$2,100,000

14795 gREEnlOCh COURT, Chesterfield.

$439,500

32 WEsTMOREland PlaCE, CWE.

$1,649,000

10104 COnWay ROad, Ladue.

$395,000

555 dEER vallEy COURT, St. Albans.

$1,599,000

8 WhiPPOORWill COURT, Defiance.

10183 Winding RidgE, Ladue.

$1,499,000

4917 KaRingTOn PlaCE COURT, mehlville.

4664 o’Bannon Farmington $567,000

LoTS/ACREAgE/FARmS $600,000

1 TBB aUBURn aT villagE viEW, St. Albans.

$419,900

$365,000

1133 Wings ROad, St. Albans.

$348,900

$349,900

1138 Wings ROad, St. Albans.

$348,900

janet mcafee inc. i 9889 clayton road i saint louis, missouri 63124 l 314.997.4800 i www.janetmcafee.com

1211 Harmony Lake Drive Cottleville $254,900

12-2 Pm 1-3 Pm


Larry L. Levy LLL Luxury Home Experience Matters. Contact me for a confidential consultation today.

SOLD

SOLD

6357 Ellenwood Avenue in Clayton

3784 Doc Sargent Road in Pacific Offered at $2,500,000.

9 Arrowhead Estates in Chesterfield Offered at $3,795,000.

6343 Alexander in Clayton

SOLD

SOLD

SOLD

SOLD

6367 Ellenwood Avenue in Clayton

6365 Ellenwood Avenue in Clayton

150 Carondelet Plaza, Unit 1501 in Clayton

8137 Westmoreland Avenue in Clayton

SOLD

SOLD

SOLD

SOLD

6369 Wydown Boulevard in Clayton

21 Arundel Place in Clayton

53 Claverach Drive in Clayton

6615 Alamo, Unit 1B in Clayton

SOLD

SOLD

SOLD

SOLD

8131 Westmoreland Avenue in Clayton

318 S. Hanley Road, Unit 2S in Clayton

5 The Prado in Ladue

11640 Conway Road in Westwood

SOLD

SOLD

SOLD

SOLD

7320 Forsyth, Unit 302 in University City

7131 Waterman in University City

364 South Harrison in Kirkwood

16352 Wyncrest Falls Way in Chesterfield

314.520.5668 larry.levy@sbcglobal.net www.janetmcafee.com/larrylevy Facebook: fb.me/larrysluxurylistings Twitter: @Claytonrealtor

#1 Individual Agent in Clayton Sales for 2016 18 years of experience. Over 135 million in lifetime sales.

janet mcafee real estate | 9889 clayton road | saint louis, missouri 63124 | 314.997.4800 | www.janetmcafee.com


Kathy Driscoll

Katie Curran

Kathy Driscoll has always been interested in homes: Her father was an architect, and her mother was also a Janet McAfee Real Estate agent. Growing up surrounded by blueprints taught her how design can shape a home for the better. Kathy uses her personal experience and attention-todetail to ensure that her clients receive the best representation possible making her a consistent Top Agent at Janet McAfee. Client-focused relationships are critical to her success. Driscoll leverages her experience into key insights, and marketing acumen.

“If you are looking for a real estate agent that can simply ‘MAKE IT HAPPEN’- Katie is your agent! We relocated back to St. Louis after 5 years in D.C. and needed a house immediately. Katie’s expansive professional network created opportunites for us in the market that simply did not exist. She kept our best interest at the forefront and pushed for the right actions and decisions to be made. She simply knocked our socks off and we couldn’t have been happier to call Katie Curran our agent! “ - Krystle Nolan

Kathy Driscoll 314.704.1474

Katie Curran 314.570.0418

Experience Matters Susan Holden

Tricia Kolbrener

A consistent Top 10 Agent and winner of the FIVE STAR Customer Satisfaction Award, Susan has been a full time Broker/Associate with Janet McAfee for 28 years, providing her expertise to both buyers and sellers in the central corridor of St. Louis. She loves her work because her true passion is helping people, and in real estate this involves one of their most significant lifetime investments. Her availability and standard of superior service with integrity goes far beyond the sale, providing advice and resources to her clients. She treats every property as if it were her own. Testimonials available on website.

Tricia is a Top Producer at Janet McAfee Real Estate, with 28 years of selling real estate. She has in-depth knowledge of the local market that can make a substantial difference. Tricia has extensive experience working in St. Louis City and throughout St. Louis County, however she specializes in the Central Corridor. She understands the subtle nuances between different streets and neighborhoods, and has a history of helping people purchase unique properties that weren’t for sale on the open market. She knows why St. Louis is a great place to live and her enthusiasm is contagious.

Susan Holden 314.503.3345

Tricia Kolbrener 314.504.5564

janet mcafee inc. l 9889 clayton road l saint louis, missouri 63124 l 314.997.4800 I www.janetmcafee.com


letter

from the

EDITOR ‌FOR THIS WEEK’S SPECIAL SECTION, WE LOVE OUR NEIGHBORHOODS, LN editorial intern Kaitlynn Martin and LN contributing writer Denise Kruse interviewed 19 local families to discover why they love their neighborhoods. Starting on p. 31, we share stories of families from the Central West End to Webster Groves and everywhere in between. I personally loved not only getting to “meet” all of these local families and the opportunity to read just a piece of their stories but also getting the inside scoop, so to speak, on each neighborhood. As I read the stories, I caught myself taking mental notes on things my husband and I need to check out around town in the future – whether a new restaurant to try in Maplewood, a new park to explore in Brentwood or a community event worth marking on our calendar in Wildwood. We hope that you enjoy this special section, too – and who knows, it may even help you pick the location of your future home! Within this week’s Style section, LN contributing writer Julia Cain shares the story of Webster Wax, a small-batch candle company in Webster Groves that uses natural soy wax for all of its hand-poured candles. Webster Wax founder Sharlene Kindt not only shares how and why she first got into the art of candle-making – would you believe it may have to do with the smell of gasoline?! – but also shares the future of the business and its products. We hope you enjoy Kindt’s fun and inspiring story, starting on p. 57, and also explore her new shop.

All the best,

Alecia Humphreys

Editor’s Corner The word around town

Congratulations to Reagan Becnel, an Ursuline Academy junior, for being named an honorable mention recipient of the 2017 National Center for Women & IT Aspirations in Computing Award. Becnel is the only St. Louis-area student to be recognized at the national level and was also a 2016 winner of the same award locally.

Congratulations to Dr. J.

Congrats to Kirkwood High School juniors Catherine Skubiz and

William Campbell for being

Tyler Kim for winning a national essay contest! Essays written by

named medical director of

both students will be published in a future issue of Yes! Magazine. More

St. Luke’s Medical Group.

than 2,000 essays were received in four categories – middle school,

Campbell is board-certified

high school, college and powerful voices – for the topic “Is not voting

in internal medicine and

a responsible option in a presidential election? Weigh in with your

infectious disease and has been

argument.” Skubiz won in the high school category, while Kim won the

with St. Luke’s since 2004.

powerful voices category.

12   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com


digital CONTENT

follow us on

SOCIAL MEDIA

laduenews.com Attend a charity or social event lately? You could be featured in our LN society photos. Visit our website for extended event coverage beyond what’s on our printed pages.

For daily updates on local happenings and trends, visit The Cut, our online-exclusive blog.

online featured gatherings

MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION OF EASTERN MISSOURI’S SNOW BALL GALA

OPERA THEATRE OF SAINT LOUIS’ ANNUAL HOLIDAY CELEBRATION

Check out some of our best feature photos in a mobile-only format on our Instagram profile: instagram.com/laduenews.

Visit our Facebook page on Mon., Feb. 6, for additional photos from our feature on Webster Wax. (see the story on p. 57).

LadueNews.com | FEBRUARY 3, 2017

13


ON THE

Cover Kids Who Read READY READERS

Succeed

By Amanda Dahl Photo courtesy of Ready Readers

T

he year 2017 marks a big anniversary for Ready Readers. It is the 20th year the nonprofit organization has spent readying tomorrow’s children for a life of learning. “We’re celebrating throughout all of 2017,” executive director Lisa Greening says. “Every month, we’re doing something special.” In 1997, Pat Simon and a small group sought to make an impact by getting children excited about books prior to starting school. “Simon and three others began reading at preschools and giving away books,” Greening shares. “We now have a staff of seven and 495 trained volunteers, who read every week to almost 10,000 preschool children from low-income communities in St. Louis and attend 179 early-childhood centers. We also provide professional development for teachers.” Although words in general can be learned through conversation, big words often are drawn from books. “If you can’t read, you can’t learn. It’s essential in today’s world to be able to read, learn and think,” Greening explains. “Ninety percent of language is acquired by age 5. It has to start day one of a child’s life.” Ready Readers, 10403 Baur Blvd., Suite H, Olivette, 314-564-8070, readyreaders.org

Do you like to reaD to chilDren? Become a Ready Reader volunteer. Read high-quality children’s literature every week for 30 minutes to the same classroom of preschoolage children in the St. Louis community. For information about volunteering, visit our website at readyreaders.org or contact Diane Sinclair, Ready Readers volunteer program director, at diane@readyreaders.org or 314-825-8751.

14

FEBRUARY 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

A special thanks to the members of the 2016 Ready Readers Literacy Society, who have generously provided leadership gifts to advance our program. Julie and Kevin Beattie Renee and Andrew Bell Cathy and James Berges Jean Birmingham and Thomas Pickel Martha and Jim Bogart Velma Boyer Pat and Mark Burkhart Maxine Clark and Robert Fox Rebecca and Jeffrey Cook Jeanne and Ken Crawford Nancy and D.J. Diemer Ann and Jim Dillon Ryan Easley Sue and Irl Engelhardt Alison and John Ferring Linda and Steven Finerty Audrey and Bruce Fleissig Nancy and Walter Galvin Diane and Joe Garea Alyson and Gregg Garland Debbie and Larry Glynn Evelyn Goldberg Susan and Paul Goldberg

Maxine and Marvin Goldman Lisa Greening and Sam Blumoff Tong and Peter Guo Donna and David Henderson Lynn and Rick Hill Angela and Harry Holiday III Lisa and David Holley Sandy Jaffe Wendy and Neil Jaffe Nancy Kalishman Jennifer and David Kaslow Beth and Larry Lenke Pam and Ken Lester Susan and Steven Lipstein Mary Michel Jessica and Andy Millner Judy Miniace Ranjana and Jeffrey Morgan Noémi and Michael Neidorff Peggy and Andy Newman Helen and Jamie O’Connor Sheila and Bob Oliveri Kim and Charlie Peters

Cindy Petzoldt Judy and Paul Putzel Julie and Eric Ralph Marilyn and Gary Ratkin Mary and Dan Riew Lisa Ring and Gregory Storch Linda and Paul Rohde Lucinda and Paul Santiago Katie and Steve Schankman Christina and Brad Schlaggar Sally and Perry Schoenecker Shirley Sher Pat and Paul Simons Nancy Siteman Julie B. and Tim Stern Mary and Joe Stieven Terri and Steven Stout Leslie Stupp Patricia Taylor Laura and Matt Villa Michelle and Grant Williams Lana and Rick Wright M. Lynn and Darrell Yearwood


16 PUJOLS FAMILY FOUNDATION

Gatherings & Goodwill 20

URBAN LEAGUE OF METROPOLITAN ST. LOUIS

21 HOLIDAY HOUSE

Visionary PHOTO BY DAVID ANDERSON

Benefits

LadueNews.com | FEBRUARY 3, 2017

15


Pujols Family Foundation

FOUNDATION O’ NIGHT DIVINE

A

Story and photos by Diane Anderson

lbert and Deidre Pujols invited guests to attend the 12th annual O’ Night Divine Christmas Celebration at the Hyatt Regency St. Louis at The Arch. Everyone sipped cocktails and enjoyed hors d’oeuvres, followed by a five-course dinner with white-glove service, before live and silent auctions. Celebrity guests included athletes and sports personalities, among them Jim and Meghan Edmonds, Tony La Russa and Aeneas Williams.

Visit LADUENEWS.COM

to see more fabulous photos from this event!

ln Andrea Bova, Amanda Signorino

Lauren and Todd Perry

Kevin and Jenna Lemmon

16

Mark Kitsmiller, Travis Blair, Aaron Ford, Rusty Meyer, Bradley Kitsmiller, Jaxson Ford, Jack Blair, Albert Pujols, Bradley Meyer, Bryce Meyer, Chase Kitsmiller

Harry and Shari Dunn

FEBRUARY 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

Lauren and Bill Fretwell, Penny Pennington

Tony Chen, Kati Fahrney, Arian Bagheri


Our family is blessed to be a part of the St. Louis community. We continue to develop special relationships that will stand the test of time. Through all of the accolades, attention and success we have experienced through Major League Baseball, we never forget that in all we do, we must humbly exist to honor God and strengthen families through our works, deeds and example. ALBERT AND DEIDRE PUJOLS

Brennen Isbell, Fabiola Cuza, Marissa, Lori and J.J. Isbell

Ed Curtis, Jim and Meghan Edmonds, Tony LaRussa

Stephanie Youngblood, Tom Lasater

Dennis Kuhl, Michelle Hatch

Diane Sedlacek, Lynn David, Jen Teemer

Ben and Cara Rister

Rick and Chloe Skalski

Robert and Jodi Gay, Deb and Kevin Bastien

Kandis and Trey Morris, Jeff Garver, Ryan and Ashley Reed

Justin Horace, Maddie Tuepker LadueNews.com | FEBRUARY 3, 2017

17


COPE24

THIRD ANNUAL GALA

Story and photos by Diane Anderson

G

uests recently visited the River City Casino & Hotel in the Lemay area of St. Louis County with considerable anticipation for the third annual COPE24 (“Changing Our Parenting Experience”) gala. That gala constitutes the largest single fundraising event to support COPE24’s mission to significantly reduce incidences of child abuse. More than 300 attendees enjoyed entertainment from U Can Dance Studio, whose members kicked off the evening with the rumba, cha-cha and tango, and guests ended the night by filing the dance floor. Edward Jones was the title sponsor for the third consecutive year, and Kristi Hodson, a teacher using the COPE24 Parenting Skills Program, was the guest speaker. Attendees enjoyed gourmet food and a late-night snack from Gus’ Pretzels. The event was COPE24’s most successful yet and would not have been possible without its many sponsors and volunteers.

Visit LADUENEWS.COM

to see more fabulous photos from this event!

ln

Inspired by the mission to significantly reduce incidences of child abuse and neglect, COPE24 is continuing to provide parenting education to thousands of high school students across the region. COPE24 creates reality-based documentary videos to aid family and consumer-science teachers in this effort. The COPE24 gala allows us to continue our goal of educating youth on the tremendous responsibility that comes with parenting and building a stronger community with healthy families.

RENE HOWITT, FOUNDER AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR (SHOWN WITH THOMAS HOWITT)

Christina and Darren Stam

18

FEBRUARY 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

Melissa and Joe Pope

Candice and Dominic Lahman


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Urban League of Metropolitan St. Louis

4TH ANNUAL WHITNEY M. YOUNG SOCIETY RECEPTION

T

Story and photos by Diane Anderson

he Whitney M. Young Society, which recently held its fourth annual reception, was founded in 2013 by Michael McMillan, president and CEO of the Urban League of Metropolitan St. Louis. It was named in honor of the great civil rights icon and former National Urban League president and CEO. The society honors outstanding donors, those giving $500 to more than $5,000 for Urban League programs and services.

Visit LADUENEWS.COM

to see more fabulous photos from this event! Lorenzo and Charmaine Savage

ln

The Urban League of Metropolitan St. Louis provides services to over 100,000 people throughout our region. We are there to help the citizens of our community become contributing members of our society. We empower communities and change lives! MICHAEL MCMILLAN, PRESIDENT AND CEO

Sarah Woolfolk Edwards, Karen Morrison, Raquelle Wallace

20

FEBRUARY 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

Erica Willis, Sherman George

Peter Neidorff, Page and Allan Ivie


Holiday House

DELTA GAMMA CENTER FOR CHILDREN WITH VISUAL IMPAIRMENTS

T

Story and photos by Diane Anderson

he latest Holiday House was hosted by Tom and Ruth Brouster on Dec. 7. For the 2016 event, marking its 26th annual celebration, 300 guests visited their magnificent Ladue home. The fundraising event included tours of the house, a dinner buffet, vintages donated by Aerie’s Resort & Winery, beer donated by Anheuser-Busch, a silent auction and more. All funds raised benefit the Delta Gamma Center for Children With Visual Impairments, which seeks to help children who are blind or visually impaired reach their full potential through family-centered, specialized services and support. Services begin when parents are told their infant is blind or visually impaired and continue through high school graduation. Annemarie and Matt Schumacher

Visit LADUENEWS.COM

to see more fabulous photos from this event!

ln

We love to support charitable organizations such as this. I think in this case, it’s about hosting an event where you know the dollars being raised and contributed really go for such a great cause. In this case, some of the children who suffer from blindness were there. I found that talking to these kids and learning about the education they are given is just so rewarding and really warms your heart, and it’s an honor to have helped out in such a way.

RUTH AND TOM BROUSTER

Alicia McDonnell, Connie Lippert, Brenda and Todd Barry, Nanne Simonds

Colleen McNealy, Brent Cowin

Cathleen Reifsteck, Olive Thompson, Mary Caine

LadueNews.com | FEBRUARY 3, 2017

21


Upcoming

GATHERINGS By Kaitlynn Martin

Sat., Feb. 4

Doorways Housing’s SHAKEN NOT STIRRED 2017 gala will take place at The Ritz-Carlton, St. Louis. 7 p.m. (red2017.splashthat.com)

Thu., Feb. 9

St. Louis Crisis Nursery will host the EAT. SHOP. LOVE. donation and raffle event at Plaza Frontenac. 5 to 7 p.m. (crisisnurserykids.org)

Fri., Feb. 10

The Kirk of the Hills Presbyterian Church’s NIGHT TO SHINE for people with special needs will take place at that church just off Ladue Road. 6 to 9 p.m. (nighttoshinestl.com)

Fri., Feb. 10

Insight Theatre Company will host a TRIVIA NIGHT at Nerinx Hall to help benefit the theater. 7 p.m. (insighttheatrecompany.com)

ALLIANCE REAL ESTATE is excited to welcome these EXPERIENCED AGENTS to our Clayton office!

314-420-0661

jillkelly@bhhsall.c jillkelly@bhhsall.com elly@bhhsall.c

MARCH 2-5 SCOTTRADE CENTER For tickets, call 800-745-3000 or buy online at ticketmaster.com

ARCHMADNESS.COM

314-691-4140

krissy.hof@bhhsall.com 8077 MARYLAND AVE | CLAYTON 314-997-7600 WWW.BHHSALL.COM ©2017 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.® Equal Housing Opportunity.

22   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com


A SPECIAL

Gatherings & Goodwill

PROMOTION

Charities & Nonprofits

Saint Louis Psychoanalytic Institute, which provides an array of psychoanalytic educational and treatment programs in aid of mental health, will host its annual fundraising gala on April 26. This year’s Spring Fling will honor Dr. K. Lynne Moritz, for whom a leadership award is being introduced. Moritz has been a leader in psychoanalysis both locally and nationally, and the award will be named after her. To learn more about Spring Fling, visit stlpi.org/spring-fling-2017/ or call 314-361-7075 ext. 326.

LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   23


CHARITIES & NONPROFITS: Feature Story

Honoring Leade Leaders SainT LouiS PSychoanaLyTic inSTiTuTe

By Robyn Dexter | Photo by Sarah Conroy

T

also served as president of the St. Louis Metropolitan he Saint Louis Psychoanalytic Institute Medical Society, president of the American will begin recognizing faculty leaders Psychoanalytic Association and director of the Institute. with the introduction of its inaugural The current executive director, Cathy Krane, has leadership award, named for Dr. K. nothing but praise for Moritz. Lynne Moritz, at the Institute’s Spring “She has been and continues to be a leader Fling on April 26. in psychoanalysis locally, nationally and even The Institute is an educational center providing internationally,” Krane says. “It’s wonderful to have psychoanalytically oriented, professional training worked with her for so many years. I can say firsthand and educational courses. It aims to support healthy that she’s an incredible leader.” development of the mind and emotions – something Krane says this award will be introduced at it’s been doing for nearly 63 years. this year’s Spring Fling – One of the Institute’s first co-chaired by Shannon Bagley graduates was Moritz. At WHAT/WHEN/WHERE: and Deanna Taylor, with the time she arrived at the Ninth Annual Spring Fling honorary chairs Jim and Joan Institute, there were skeptics 6 to 9 p.m. April 26 Schiele – but will not have its that could have deterred Third Degree Glass Factory first awardee until next year’s her from integrating a wave event. The leadership award of research that is true to will promote the traditions of this day: An adult caring To purchase tickets, the Institute and its leaders, for a child can influence the visit stlpi.org/spring-fling-2017. and Krane says she hopes it structure of a child’s brain To learn about sponsorship will encourage new leaders as it matures. Moritz was an opportunities, call 314-361-7075 ext. 326. to come forward and make early believer and devoted an impact on the St. Louis her full attention to research community. It is to be awarded annually. and the needs of her patients. Moritz says she’s “thrilled” that the Institute has Over the years, she has served as an adjunct created this award and named it in her honor. associate professor and lecturer at Washington “I am deeply moved by this recognition from my University in St. Louis and has served as president peers and the chance it gives us all to make a difference of the America Psychiatric Association. Moritz has

24

FEBRUARY 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com | A lAdUE nEws spEciAl pRomotion

for young colleagues,” she says. At this year’s Spring Fling, taking place at Third Degree Glass Factory on April 26, the Institute and event attendees will honor Moritz for her work, and the award will be officially named for her. “She definitely represents what we’re hoping for with this award: a true leader,” Krane says. “It’s wonderful to have it named after her.” 8820 Ladue Road, Third Floor, St. Louis, 314-361-7075, stlpi.org

Thank you to our

Sponsors

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27 DESIGN DESTINATION

Abode 28

31

FEATURE: PANTONE COLOR OF THE YEAR

LN SPECIAL SECTION: WE LOVE OUR NEIGHBORHOODS

Verdant

Verve

LadueNews.com | FEBRUARY 3, 2017

25


THE TRIO

Cabin

Comforts

By Nancy Robinson

‌Create your own little mountain-inspired getaway right here in the city this winter. Our top picks for the look: a fringed leather cocktail ottoman, scenic leather chair and pillow decorated with the likeness of man’s best friend. Remember rockin’ those over-the-top leather jackets with the long fringe back in the day? We pretty much feel the same about Lee Industries’ fringed leather cocktail

Y Thank ou ST. LOUIS

for shopping at Pink Magnolia, your local independently owned Lilly Pulitzer Signature Store.

ottoman. Available through The Great Cover-Up. (greatcoverupdesign.com)

Hancock & Moore’s Norvell leather chair features a scene depicting Mount Everest. Other options include the Ancient Thunder Horse and Parisian Stroll designs on leather. Available through Shubert Design. (shubertdesign.com)

This 20-by-20 screenprinted Zeus pillow sporting

A

S I G N AT U R E S T O R E

the likeness of a husky is perfect for the man

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cave. The cover is made of 100 percent cotton canvas with a removable poly-fiber pillow form. A portion of proceeds benefit the Harnessed to Hope

26   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

Northern Breed Rescue. (ericandchristopher.com)


Design DESTINATION

FLORENCE, ITALY

By Kaitlynn Martin

F

lorence, Italy, brims with history, art and architecture. Known as the birthplace of the Renaissance, the city fostered an influence on art, literature and science that spread throughout the rest of Italy and well into Europe. It has become a destination for many, though, as the orange terra cotta roofs along the Arno River make everything Florentine feel whimsical and romantic. Spacious piazzas, dotted with vendors scooping gelato and sliding bubbling pizzas out of wood-fired ovens, are surrounded by landmarks like the Uffizi Gallery and the massive cathedral dome of Duomo di Firenze, fixed at the heart of the city. The pieces shown here are sure to bring the inspiration and energy of Florence to your own home.

ln

LIGHT QUATREFOIL MIRROR Use this mirror to make a room resemble the many-windowed splendor of Florence’s Duomo di Firenze. The reddish-brown coloring also pays homage to the terra cotta roofs found across the city. $560, available at Ethan Allen (ethanallen.com)

MALACHITE TOOTHBRUSH HOLDER

ANSON BOOKCASE This bookcase’s rectangular shape and windowlike doors invite comparisons to Florence’s Ponte Vecchio, an iconic bridge that features homes and shops where vendors sell treasures. $1,648, available at DAU Furniture (daufurniture.com)

Channel Florence with this golden design that emulates the smooth, creamy texture of Michelangelo’s marble David, which stands tall in Florence’s Galleria dell’Accademia. $68, available at Jonathan Adler (jonathanadler.com)

LadueNews.com | FEBRUARY 3, 2017

27


Green Going

By Nancy Robinson | Photos supplied

BRING GREENERY INDOORS THIS WINTER WITH PANTONE’S COLOR OF THE YEAR.

When deploying the 2017 Color of the Year in interiors, designer Teddy Karl of The Great CoverUp is partial to Thibaut’s Nairobi pattern, which is especially fetching in green and warm white. It’s part of the Monterey collection available through The Great CoverUp. The Great Cover-Up, 9708 Clayton Road, Ladue, 314-995-5701, greatcoverupdesign.com

S

pring is coming early this year, at least in many of the fashion and home boutiques that subscribe to annual color trends put forth by Pantone, a global color authority. Pantone has named Greenery as its 2017 Color of the Year, describing its pick as a fresh and zesty yellow-green that evokes the first days of spring when nature revives and renews. “Greenery bursts forth in 2017 to provide us with the reassurance we yearn for amid a tumultuous social and political environment,” says Leatrice Eiseman, executive director of the Pantone Color Institute, on its website. “Satisfying our growing desire to rejuvenate and revitalize, Greenery symbolizes the reconnection we seek with nature, one another and a larger purpose.” The last time green was singled out for the Color of the Year honor was 2013. The shade was Emerald, a deep, brilliant jewel tone associated with luxury and sophistication. In contrast, Greenery is a lighter, more nuanced green that skews toward yellow. Pantone characterizes Greenery as “nature’s neutral” and a versatile “trans-seasonal” shade that lends itself to many color combinations. It pairs well with most hues, including neutral, bright, pastel, metallic and deep shades, and even both of Pantone’s 2016 picks, Rose Quartz and Serenity. Check out the following home-décor options to see how you might incorporate Greenery in your own home this season.

Upholstered furniture manufacturer Jessica Charles jumped on the Pantone Color of the Year bandwagon with the Hug Chaise in Greenery. The fabric imparts a cheerful and whimsical impression when applied to the sinuous shape of the frame and is perfect for contemporary interiors. Available through Shubert Design Furniture. Shubert Design Furniture, 161 Gaywood Drive, Ballwin, 636-394-2220, shubertdesign.com

28

FEBRUARY 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

IKEA’s Dito flatware is an affordable way to incorporate Pantone’s 2017 Color of the Year into your kitchen and dining room. The plastic-andstainless flatware is sold in sets of 20 and includes four forks, knives, tablespoons, teaspoons, and dessert and salad forks. IKEA,1 IKEA Way, St. Louis, 888-888-4532, ikea.com


Get your prep on with Taylor King’s classic Martin slipper chair in zippy green with navy tape applied to the seat and loose back cushion. The armless design is well suited to smaller dwellings, and a matching ottoman also is offered. Available through Shubert Design Furniture.

St. Louis interior designer CJ Knapp loves Pantone’s Greenery as both a backdrop and an accent. “Have you noticed how in the spring a single wild violet stands out amid all of the green grass?” she asks. “Green does not advance like red or recede like blue.” One of her favorite new fresh green accents is Curated Kravet’s Witherspoon Planter. (curatedkravet.com) CJ Knapp Interiors, 314-283-1760, cjknappinteriors.com

Pantone’s Greenery can work even with the most challenging palettes, illustrated by Lotus Lake from the Waverly Classics II collection by York Wallcoverings. This whimsical chinoiserie watercolor print incorporates various greens along with corals, orange, charcoal and black. Available through Reineke Decorating Center. Reineke Decorating Center, 12017 Manchester Road, Des Peres, 314-821-1616; 8121 Manchester Road, Brentwood, 314-645-2020; reinekedecorating.com

Hancock & Moore’s Kyra chair with a quilted back, silver nail-head trim and elegant exposed legs is an ideal vehicle for bringing Greenery into living rooms. The chair works especially well in transitional and contemporary interiors. Available through KDR Showrooms. KDR Showrooms, 11660 Page Service Drive, St. Louis, 314-993-5020, kdrshowrooms.com

Add a springtime feel to your bedroom with Matouk’s Mirasol Egyptian cotton sheeting collection, inspired by the shop awnings with arched trim found on Worth Avenue in Palm Beach, California. The motif comes in a variety of colors, including this beautiful green hue. Available through Sallie Home. Sallie Home, 9821 Clayton Road, Ladue, 314-567-7883, salliehome.com (Photo courtesy of Matouk)

CR Laine’s Whittier chair is an excellent example of how nicely the Color of the Year pairs with neutrals like creamy white and warm gray. The fabric pattern shown is called Berma Vine, a billowing floral print inspired by a document print, designed by Mary McDonald for Schumacher. Available through interior designers. crlaine.com

An easy way to incorporate the Color of the Year: an inexpensive area rug like Surya’s Rain pattern. A literal interpretation of Greenery, it features a supersize variegated leaf pattern in various shades of green mixed with dark brown, cream, white and camel. The polypropylene rug is hand-hooked with a latex backing and is safe for outdoor use. Available through Frill Home. Frill Home, 8837 Ladue Road, Ladue, 314-696-2222, frillhomestl.com

LadueNews.com | FEBRUARY 3, 2017

29


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BommaritoINFINITI.com 30   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com


A SPECIAL

Abode

PROMOTION

we Love Our neighborhoods

Richmond Heights olivette Chesterfield Brentwood Des Peres

Clayton

GLendaLe

BaLLwin Maplewood Creve Coeur

Manchester Ladue Frontenac WildWood Central West End

WebsterGroves KirKwood Town and Country University City

From the Central West End to Webster Groves to Ladue and Chesterfield, vibrant and historic neighborhoods abound in St. Louis. in this, our annual we Love Our neighborhoods guide, we’ve asked 19 local families to share with us what they love most about their neighborhoods – from local businesses and services to the beautiful parks, arts and culture, and robust annual events that make their communities great places to live.

A Ladue News Special Promotion  |  LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   31


We love our neighborhoods

Kim Carney

Ladue

The Upadhyays

Your Ladue Real Estate Expert

By Denise Kruse | Photo by Sarah Conroy

TaKing real esTaTe To The nexT level

The market is hot... call Kim Carney for a market analysis The Kim Carney Difference Kim Carney doesn’t just stick a sign in a yard and hope the property sells; she takes a fresh approach to marketing homes – and it works.

314-422-7449

www.TheCarneyTeam.Com | Kim.Carney@ColdwellBanKer.Com 2203 souTh Big Bend Blvd | suiTe 200 | 314-336-1924

Akash, Shruti, Meera and Ashish Upadhyay

N

ew York natives Shruti and Ashish Upadhyay moved to St. Louis more than a decade ago, hoping to find a better quality of life. Shruti, an English teacher at Ladue Horton Watkins High School, and Ashish, a senior manager at World Wide Technology, chose to settle in Ladue five years ago after falling in love with its small-town feel and close community, a perfect fit for the couple and their two children, Meera, 11, and Akash, 13, both students at Ladue Middle School.

What first drew you to Ladue, the house or the location?

Love Where You Live!

We absolutely love the central location and easy access to the many attractions in surrounding areas. We love that each street in Ladue has its own charm and history. Luckily, we came across our home and knew it was a perfect fit. It’s a great neighborhood to go for a walk and visit with friendly neighbors.

5 Wendover Drive | Ladue

Ladue charmer nestled perfectly in the end cul-de-sac of Wendover Lane! Sitting on almost an acre, this home boasts en suite updated bathrooms for every bedroom and a bonus playroom on the second floor! You will love the first-floor XL mud room/laundry room just off the attached garage, hardwood floors, master suite with private office, finished basement and large windows throughout. Reed Elementary and SLCC up the street! $835,000

24 Enfield Drive | Olivette You will fall in love with this beautifully updated home featuring a huge master suite with lofted ceilings, French doors, extra-large walk-in

Where are some of your favorite places to dine in Ladue? Our family go-to spot is Original Pancake House. Giovanni’s Kitchen is a great place to get service with a smile and eat a delicious meal.

What’s a good date night in Ladue? A great date night would consist of happy hour at either BrickTop’s or Fleming’s Prime Steakhouse & Wine Bar and a movie at the quaint Plaza Frontenac theater.

closet and private bath! Open floor plan allows for flawless entertaining in the large kitchen, great room and outdoor deck! This house has it all! $499,000

The Lizzy Dooley Group c. 314.680.1426 | o. 314.725.5100 lauramccarthy.com

32   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com  |

A Ladue News Special Promotion

Why would you encourage others to move to your neighborhood? Ladue is a nice place to live, as it is accessible to a variety of restaurants and shops, central to all other locations in St. Louis and a safe place to live. We love that practically anywhere we drive to go is about a 15- to 20-minute drive. Also, we can’t say enough about the schools. Ladue School District is one of the reasons to live here – it’s dedicated to student learning and embraces diversity.


We love our neighborhoods CLAYTON

The Townsends By Denise Kruse | Photo submitted

Dependable. Dedicated. Determined. H elping you find your dream hom e fo r 32 years.

On any given day, Jill Malley can be found in the Laura McCarthy Clayton office. She has spent 32 years with Laura McCarthy, and is a lifelong resident of St. Louis, making Jill not only an expert in listing and selling properties, but a knowledgeable ambassador and relocation expert for out-of-town buyers. With career sales over 1 25 million and recognized as a top producer for the past 1 5 years, Jill’s attention to detail and contagious energy, has helped her generate a lengthy list of satisfied buyers and sellers. Referring Jill to friends and family, she credits her clients for her success. Remaining with one company for the entirety of her career, Jill is confident in her decision, “I feel there is none better in the St. Louis community, from management, to the caliber of agents and work ethic expected throughout, there is none finer than Laura McCarthy”.

H

Laura, Tom, Nate and Jeanne Townsend

istoric Tudor brick homes on stately, tree-lined streets and a commercial shopping and dining district gave Clayton exactly the homey feeling Tom and Jeanne Townsend were looking for. The couple moved to the area in 1996 after stints living in both University City and Soulard. The Townsends appreciate the big role the Clayton area plays in historic St. Louis – in fact, the family’s property was once a part of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, more commonly known as the St. Louis World’s Fair, hosted in 1904. The Townsends, along with their adult children – Laura, 22, and Nate, 25 – also are the founders of Pianos for People, a charity they began in memory of their son and brother, Alex, who passed away in 2010. Pianos for People provides free pianos and lessons to underprivileged families across the St. Louis area. The couple are also the founders of the Alex Townsend Memorial Foundation and the A-Town Art and Music Festival in Savannah, Georgia.

When Jill isn’t working for her clients or in the office, she enjoys power walking and spending time with her son, Andrew.

Jill helped place families in ...

28 Arundel Place

Why would you encourage others to move to your neighborhood? The community spirit, the short walking distance to so many charming bars and restaurants, the proximity to Forest Park and the easy access to other parts of town.

What are your favorite local go-to spots? We like Sasha’s Wine Bar, DeMun Oyster Bar and Northwest Coffee Roasting Co., among many other places. Our son Nate loves Pastaria, and Laura likes Kaldi’s Coffee Roasting Co.

What’s your ideal date night in or near Clayton? We’d like dinner at Boundary and a movie at the nearby Hi-Pointe Theatre, or a leisurely dinner with friends at I Fratellini.

What’s the best way to spend a weekend in Clayton? Friday night [would be] dinner in downtown Clayton. Saturday brunch at Pastaria, then Northwest Coffee Roasting Co., followed by Forest Park in the afternoon. Saturday night we might meet friends at DeMun Oyster Bar and close the weekend with a glass of wine [on] Sunday afternoon at Sasha’s Wine Bar.

202 N. Brentwood #3A

27 Dartford Avenue Represented the Buyer!

Jill Malley - Cohen c: 314.277.9568 o: 314.725.5100

A LADUE NEWS SPECIAL PROMOTION  |  LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   33


. .because there is no place like home!

We love our neighborhoods Frontenac

The Eke-Okoros By Denise Kruse | Photo by Sarah Conroy‌

Barbara, Kelenna, Ihenna, Chinaza, Udonne and Udonna Eke-Okoro

B

arbara and Udonna Eke-Okoro, transplants from New Jersey via Virginia, came to the St. Louis area for a job relocation. They chose Frontenac for the Ladue School District, ideal for children Kelenna, 11, and Udonne, 13, students at Ladue Middle School, and twin boys Chinaza and Ihenna, 8, who attend Conway Elementary. Udonna, business initiatives manager at Wells Fargo Investment Institute, and Barbara, an aspiring interior home stylist and volunteer at Ladue School District, love their Frontenac neighborhood. They enjoy subdivision parties, friendships with kind and thoughtful neighbors, and convenient proximity to St. Louis attractions and nearby shopping and dining at Plaza Frontenac.

What are your go-to local spots? Any hidden gems? Our family likes the pizza at Grassi’s. It’s a great spot to have a casual dinner with friends, especially after a night of the kids’ sporting events. Brio is one of our favorite places for date night; the outdoor dining during the warmer months adds a special touch to the evening. Massages are highly recommended over at the Stonewater Spa [at Plaza Frontenac], and you should try the quaint theater also in Plaza Frontenac that serves wine and screens movies that are not always available [at megaplexes]. A little gem I love is the Nail Lounge. Yani, one of the nail techs, is always personable and my go-to for mani-pedis.

What are some of your children’s favorite spots? Our kids like The Shack restaurant (and the nearby FroYo is an added treat).

What’s the best way to spend a weekend in Frontenac?

8077 Maryland Ave |Clayton | 314-997-7600 17050 Baxter Road #200 | Chesterfield | 636-537-0300 Relocation | 636-733-5010 ©2017 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.® Equal Housing Opportunity.

34   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com  |

A Ladue News Special Promotion

Enjoy the restaurants in the Plaza and the designer stores. Massages are highly recommended over at the Stone Water Spa, and you should try the quaint theater, also in Plaza Frontenac, that serves wine and plays movies that are not always available on the big screens. If you are in the mood for more activity, you can finish off your evening at the Frontenac Racquet Club.


We love our neighborhoods Town and Country

The Sorkins By Denise Kruse | Photo by Sarah Conroy‌

SPRAWLING MID-CENTURY RANCH ON 1.5 ACRES Fabulous Town & Country living awaits you, in this mid-century, 4,200-squarefoot ranch, designed for entertaining. Sunshine radiates throughout the home, with floor-to-ceiling windows in the Great Room, while a magnificent stone fireplace keeps it warm and cozy. The walkout lower level is perfect for a kid’s playroom or teen’s hangout. Beautiful views of the pool can be seen throughout the home. Relax by the pool on a hot summer night, or grab the football to toss in the expansive backyard. 12426 Clayton Road, Town and Country, $719,000 Showings Begin Sunday, February 19, 2017

Jude, Annelle, Oscar, Harlee and Harley Sorkin

H

arlee and Annelle Sorkins met in college at the University of Illinois and lived in Champaign, Illinois, for 10 years after college. Eventually, though, what they playfully refer to as “the elasticity of St. Louis umbilical cords” tugged them back to Harlee’s childhood home in Town and Country. Harlee’s grandparents built the home they currently live in back when the property was located in unincorporated west St. Louis County – Harlee’s mother grew up in the home, as did Harlee and his siblings. After a gut renovation, the couple put their distinctive mark on the home, adding an additional story, garage, deck and landscaping, as well as a bocce court and – after watching Napoleon Dynamite – a tetherball pole. The couple’s boys (Oscar, 10, Jude, 14, and Harley, 17) are the fourth generation to grow up in the home.

Where are your go-to neighborhood spots? Queeny Park is a favorite for running the trails, but we can’t forget the Town and Country parks. Longview Farms Park in particular is perfect for walking the dogs and yoga classes. Drace Park is a lesser-known option that’s ideal for families with younger kids. There are log cabins and woods for the kids to explore, and there are walking paths around the park.

Contact Lisa Martel for more information 314-725-0009

314-913-2084 Lisa.Martel@SIR.com

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Why would you encourage others to move to Town and Country? We’ve watched our neighborhood turn over to a new generation, and it’s now filled with young professional families. We’re surrounded by families that have kids ranging from infants to college-aged. Fun fact: Our neighbor Dr. Gerry Berndsen, who is 96 and still lives independently, piloted a C-47 dropping some of the first allied paratroopers over Utah Beach early in the morning of D-Day. He came home from the war, went to medical school at Wash U. and had a long career in medicine. He was still making rounds at St. Luke’s hospital until just recently. Our kids love to visit with him and hear his stories.

10730 Indian Head Industrial Blvd. - 428-3700 marquardscleaners.com 7480 Delmar at Hanley - 727-0830 7719 Clayton Rd. - 727-6060

9644 Clayton Rd. - 993-3599 14380 S. Outer 40 Rd. - 576-4141

A Ladue News Special Promotion  |  LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   35


We love our neighborhoods Chesterfield

8077 Maryland Ave |Clayton | 314-997-7600 17050 Baxter Road #200 | Chesterfield | 636-537-0300 Relocation | 636-733-5010

Packnett and Moten By Denise Kruse | Photo by Sarah Conroy‌

Gwendolyn Packnett, Ph.D., and John Moten Jr.

N

ewlyweds Gwendolyn Packnett and John Moten Jr. are St. Louis natives who have called many neighborhoods in St. Louis and St. Louis County home. They finally settled into a condominium in Chesterfield after their marriage in June 2016. John, retired senior vice president of operations and marketing at Laclede Gas, had lived in Wildwood prior to his marriage to Gwendolyn, retired assistant vice chancellor of academic affairs at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, and they chose Chesterfield for its proximity to restaurants, theaters, highways, shopping and more. “Location, location, location equals convenience, convenience, convenience!” Gwendolyn says.

What drew you to your neighborhood first, your home or the location? John loved the area and has lots of friends and established business relationships in Chesterfield. Admittedly, I’ve had the best of both worlds – having lived in both the city and county. Living close to Highway 40 provides easy access to so much, including the organizations we are involved in, an easy drive to social outings, our church and drives to visit family and friends. We were equally drawn to an area with owners’ pride, a great clubhouse and community activities.

Where are your favorite local go-to spots?

. .because home is where memories are made. ©2017 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.® Equal Housing Opportunity.

36   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com  |

A Ladue News Special Promotion

We enjoy walks in Faust Park, visits to the Butterfly House, events at the Chesterfield Amphitheater, in-house readings at the local libraries, events at STAGES St. Louis, and for date night, a great dinner at Annie Gunn’s and a worthwhile movie at Chesterfield Mall. Enjoying a meal at the nearby Cooper’s Hawk is always a favorite.

What’s the best way to spend a weekend in Chesterfield? Enjoying walks at Faust Park, shopping at premium outlet malls, breakfast at First Watch, listening to jazz and a good read in the comfort of our dwelling.


We love our neighborhoods WILDWOOD

The Thurmans By Kaitlynn Martin | Photo by Bryan Schraier‌

Sydney, Justin, Shereé and James Thurman

S

hereé and James Thurman did not anticipate staying in Wildwood for long after moving there from Rochester, New York – but that was 10 years ago. Along with their children, Justin, 10, and Sydney, 14, the Thurmans enjoy the not-too-small yet not-too-big size of their community, which features a town square bustling with food and entertainment. Above all, the school district and strong sense of community continue to make the Thurmans happy to have spent the past decade in Wildwood.

Why did you choose to live in Wildwood? The driving force was the school district. We moved here and our daughter had already started kindergarten, so we were looking for a great school district – somewhere with high scores and academic awards. When we moved here, West County was really bustling and expanding. It was like a city, which really appealed to us.

What do you love most about Wildwood? There’s a great sense of community here, and people really support each other. From a school perspective, everyone from administrators, peers and neighbors are involved. From a personal perspective in our own neighborhood, we’ve had some unfortunate tragedies and illnesses, along with births and other, more positive things. But no matter what, there is a great sense of everyone coming together to better the situation.

What has surprised you most about your neighborhood? All the nearby state parks and trails. Also, we never lived in an area where people had so many pets, especially dogs. People here love the outdoors and their dogs. We even eventually adopted a dog ourselves!

What restaurants and shopping areas do love in your neighborhood? Lately, our family’s favorite is Benedetto’s On Main in the town square. It’s upscale, casual and serves fabulous Italian food. The place has something on the menu for everyone, from calamari, scampi risotto to pizza. A LADUE NEWS SPECIAL PROMOTION  |  LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   37


We love our neighborhoods Creve Coeur

The Horowitzs By Kaitlynn Martin | Photo by Bryan Schraier‌

Josh, Matthew, Jeff, Haley and Susie Horowitz

S

usie and Jeff Horowitz have called Creve Coeur home for a bit more than 10 years. They both were born and raised in Creve Coeur and are happy to share their love for the community with their three children, Matthew, 12, Josh, 16, and Haley, 17. Neighborhood get-togethers and the close relationships they have with neighbors – plus the opportunity to play tennis as a family in local parks – are a few of their favorite reasons to live in Creve Coeur.

Why did you choose to live in Creve Coeur? The area is comfortable and familiar, and we enjoy the small, tightknit community. We like to walk to places around Creve Coeur, and it is very central and close to different parts of the city. Also, being so close to family is a plus. Our kids really like that they can see their grandparents on a whim.

Why would you encourage others to move to Creve Coeur? The people are very warm and welcoming. It’s a small community – [kids] walk to school and want to get to know you. It’s also such a pretty place. You can go up and down so many different roads that provide great views.

What restaurants do you enjoy dining at in your neighborhood? Some of our favorite places are Oishi Sushi and Five Star Burger. Sometimes we like to walk to FroYo for a fun dessert. I really think Creve Coeur’s restaurants reflect the wonderful culture of our neighborhood. Along with the neighborhood, our schools are very diverse, which I think is also a big draw to our area. People move to Creve Coeur and really like it. They come and end up staying, because it’s such an inviting community.

What is Creve Coeur’s best-kept secret? I think our neighborhoods and our schools are very diverse, and it hasn’t always been that way. It definitely wasn’t like that here when I was growing up. Diversity is such a benefit for our children to meet so many different people from all over the world.

38   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com  |

A Ladue News Special Promotion


We love our neighborhoods Ballwin

The Howards By Kaitlynn Martin | Photo by Sarah Conroy‌

Erica, Christian, Louis, Nathan and Eve Howard

N

athan, a chief compliance officer, and Erica Howard, a real estate attorney, together have called Ballwin home for around nine years. Their family includes Christian, 12, Louis, 6, and Eve, 20 months. The couple praises Ballwin’s outstanding school district, along with many opportunities for their family to explore a diverse selection of restaurants.

What do you love most about living in Ballwin? You still see kids playing outside and riding bikes, and families going on walks. It’s refreshing and surprising that you still have that going on in an ever-more-digital society. Also, Christian has autism, so being in this school district and seeing how willing they’ve been to work with him and us has been one of the best things about living here.

What restaurants do you enjoy dining at in Ballwin? With the multicultural aspect of the area, there are so many different types of restaurants, from Indian to Thai and then Korean. We have Japanese and some Pakistani joints. There’s all kinds of really fun places to eat.

Why would you encourage others to move to your neighborhood? I would tell them that the standard of living is good, even within the St. Louis area; cost of living is not terribly high. We live in a house, that I think if you were to go to Clayton, for example, you would pay twice as much for. Apart from that, the convenience of location, along with the school district. I think it’s hard to find a reason not to want to live in Ballwin.

What is your neighborhood’s best-kept secret? I think our house has one of the best views of Ballwin. We have a very scenic outlook over a neighborhood pond, which is just beautiful. Also, two houses down is the Bacon Log Cabin, which is open on weekends. There is always some sort of bake sale or open house going on there. A Ladue News Special Promotion  |  LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   39


We love our neighborhoods Manchester

The Morgans By Kaitlynn Martin | Photo by Sarah Conroy‌

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40   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com  |

A Ladue News Special Promotion

Mike, Kylie and Andrea Morgan

I

n September 2008, Andrea and Mike Morgan bought Mike’s childhood home in Manchester from his parents. Nine years later, the Morgans still call the neighborhood home and have found it to be a great area to raise their daughter, Kylie, 13. They’ve also hosted two exchange students in their home, one from Thailand and the other from Spain, as part of Parkway South High School’s exchange program. Manchester has proved to be not only a place for them to grow together as a family but also a place where they continue to meet and learn about people from around the world.

Why did you choose to live in Manchester? Mike’s parents decided to move to Arizona just as we were trying to figure out where we wanted to be when Kylie started kindergarten. We immediately knew we wanted to buy this house and already knew we loved the neighborhood, schools and community.

What do you love most about Manchester? Overall, it’s a community with many family events and activities within the neighborhood itself. We like that there are a lot of places we can go within walking distance. It has that feeling that you have everything you need in the community, but you can easily go out into the larger St. Louis area as well. The schools are outstanding with the teachers’ dedication. Within our community, I know I can count on our friends and neighbors if we ever need help. It’s a great place to raise kids.

What restaurants and shopping areas do you enjoy the most in your neighborhood? The Fruit Stand has local and organic fruits and veggies plus plants and seasonal items. Chalily Ponds & Gardens has outdoor water features like ponds, waterfalls, fountains, water plants, koi and other water creatures. The store is like a small park; it’s fun to go and walk around. Also, Rice Thai Bistro is our go-to neighborhood restaurant for dine-in or carry-out.


We love our neighborhoods Glendale

The Carpenters By Denise Kruse | Photo by Sarah Conroy‌

Anne, Dan and Abby Carpenter (not pictured, Tom)

C

onvenience to urban attractions and amenities with a small-town feel are what drew the Carpenter family to Glendale two decades ago. “It has been an amazing place to raise our family,” says Anne Carpenter, who has lived with husband Dan, partner at Carpenter Moser law firm, for 20 years. Tucked between Kirkwood and Webster Groves, the family’s Glendale home is an easy walk to both the Kirkwood farmers market and Straub’s in Webster Groves. Walkability to local shops and restaurants has been great for the entire family, including the Carpenter kids, Abby, 18, and Tom, 20. Glendale has its own treasures, to be sure – a favorite for the family is Hanneke’s Westwood Market and Catering Service. “It still has house accounts – our kids loved this when they were young!” Anne says of the market.

What drew you in first, the home or the location? The tightknit community and central location between Kirkwood and Webster. Living in Glendale is like living in a small town in the middle of the larger St. Louis community. We love that when we walk or run around the area, we can always stop to talk to people we know along the way – everyone is friendly and welcoming, and neighbors look out for each other.

What is your favorite aspect of living in Glendale? We love our neighborhood and neighbors. Our kids were able to walk to grade school and ride their bikes to the pool in the summer. Living in Glendale is like living in a small town in the middle of the larger St. Louis community. We love that when we walk or run around the area, we can always stop to talk to people we know along the way – everyone is friendly and welcoming. Neighbors look out for each other. It has been an amazing place to raise our family.

What is the best way to spend a weekend in Glendale? Glendale hosts a couple of special Glendale Nights that have always been weekend family favorites. All of Glendale comes out for these events, and it’s a fun way to spend time with everyone in the area. We love the jazz night that is held at city hall each summer, as well as the Glendale Firehouse Run in October. A Ladue News Special Promotion  |  LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   41


We love our neighborhoods Kirkwood

The Bendañas By Denise Kruse | Photo by Sarah Conroy‌

656 Brookhaven Court | $989,000

Experts in KIRKWOOD and the NEIGHBORHOODS you love!

1831 Camberly Road | $1,090,000

Nick, Fred, Alex, Jessica and Natalia Bendaña

359 Bach Avenue $729,000

11734 Brookbend Drive $959,000

F

red and Jessica Bendaña moved to Kirkwood in 2005, relocating from California. During a short weekend trip dedicated to house hunting, they found a home they loved in Kirkwood. “We planned to stay in it a few years and search for a more permanent home in other areas,” Jessica says. “We came to love the community and can’t see ever leaving – we’re drawn by the strong sense of community and small-town feel of this amazing little city.” Kirkwood’s proximity to vibrant neighborhoods throughout the St. Louis area, plus its walkability and general geniality, has made it an ideal place to raise daughter Natalia, 7, and sons Alex and Nick, both 10. “There’s no better place,” Jessica says.

What’s your family’s go-to spot? Known for their delicious margaritas and authentic Mexican cuisine, our family’s go-to spot is Amigo’s Cantina. On Sunday nights, you can also end the weekend listening to their quality Mariachi band.

What’s a good date night in Kirkwood? 665 Wyndham Crossing Circle | $579,000

We like to sneak away for a quick date night at 119 North, a tapasand-wine bar on Kirkwood Road.

What’s the best way to spend a weekend in Kirkwood?

522 Middleton Court $529,000

1833 Bopp Road $525,000 CLAYTON · 314·725·5100 TOWN & COUNTRY · 314·569·1177 LAURAMCCARTHY.COM

42   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com  |

A Ladue News Special Promotion

The best way to spend the weekend is by walking around and exploring what’s happening throughout the neighborhood. We’re blessed with a great farmers market around the corner from our home. We like walking up there, and on Saturday mornings, we also enjoy strolling up to McArthur’s Bakery Café for breakfast and swinging by The Bug Store and Sammysoap to browse.

What are some of your children’s favorite spots in Kirkwood? The Magic House, of course! And Pottery Hollow, Kirkwood Park, Kirkwood Ice Rink, Tropical Moose and The Custard Station.


We love our neighborhoods WEBSTER GROVES

Real Estate Specialists, just down the street... opening the door to your dream home in

K irkwood, Web ster Groves an d Glend ale!

The Genoveses By Denise Kruse | Photo by Rob Westrich

230 McDonald Place

SOLD!

Mollie, Laura, Tony Jr., Tony and Annie Genovese

S

Represented buyer and seller!

SOLD as buyers agent!

275 Blackmer Place

356 Halcyon Drive

t. Louis natives and high school sweethearts Tony Genovese, chief executive officer and owner of Enhanced Medical Services, and wife Laura, owner of Outside the Line, an art studio and gallery in Webster Groves, chose Webster Groves as their home seven years ago. “Tony and I fell in love with the community first, and then we found our home,” Laura says. “We were always drawn to the charm and character of the homes in Webster Groves.” With the nearby conveniences of local shops and restaurants, the community provides ample opportunity for the Genoveses to spend weekends together as a family, as well as a safe, walkable community for their kids, Tony Jr., 10, Mollie, 12, and Annie, 16.

Represented the Buyer!

What do you love about Webster Groves?

633 Sherwood Drive

We are surrounded by beautiful and eclectic homes filled with wonderful people in a family-centered community. Our favorite aspect of living in Webster Groves is that it’s a safe, family-friendly community filled with history and charm. We are surrounded by beautiful and eclectic homes filled with wonderful people in a family-centered community.

What are your favorite local go-to spots and date-night destinations? Our local go-to spots include daily trips to Straub’s, Dewey’s Pizza for dinner and an occasional stroll to Saint Louis Bread Co. on the weekends. Our favorite date night is enjoying an amazing dinner at Olive + Oak, with maybe a nightcap afterwards at Robust Wine Bar. During the summer, we love to sit outside at the new bar and enjoy dinner at Algonquin Country Club – we try really hard to do this every week!

What are some of your kids’ favorite spots in Webster Groves? My kids love walking to downtown Webster and hanging with their friends. This seems to be the popular thing to do, especially when it’s warm. On colder days, they love to grab a warm drink and be creative at Yucandu Art Studio!

SOLD as buyers agent!

4 Kings Pond

Represented the Buyer!

806 North Rock Hill

Jill Azar

Top Single Producer in 2016 (non-team) c: 314.616.8836 o: 314.725.5100

Ellen Dolan c: 314.799.5476 o: 314.725.5100

Business expertise. Community Involvement. Top notch customer service.

A LADUE NEWS SPECIAL PROMOTION  |  LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   43


We love our neighborhoods Brentwood

The Grays By Denise Kruse | Photo by Sarah Conroy‌

Vickie and Elizabeth Gray

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fter nearly two decades in the Central West End, Chesterfield native Vickie Gray, account manager for STL Programs, moved to Brentwood three years ago. The move was so that her daughter, Elizabeth, 11, a student at Mark Twain Elementary School, could take advantage of the Brentwood School District. “The sense of community here is amazing,” Vickie says. “People connecting with and helping each other – it’s wonderful!”

What are your local favorites? Any hidden gems? I think Brentwood’s hidden gems are its amenities. We have more than 3 miles of paved and scenic walking and biking trails that go through the woods and over bridges – with four parks and playgrounds along the way. Everyone walks their dogs, and the kids ride their bikes along the trails. There are racquetball, tennis and sand volleyball courts, and an inline skating rink. We also have our own ice skating rink, and the Brentwood library is right around the corner from my house. Plus many community events, like Maddenfest Parade and the library’s kids’ summer book club barbecue at the Brentwood firehouse.

Why would you encourage others to move to your neighborhood? Brentwood is a friendly, very walkable community with outstanding schools, great parks and recreational facilities, and a convenient location near major interstates, plus the many cultural activities and shopping. I can walk to Trader Joe’s or be in Forest Park in less than 10 minutes. My friends all say I live in Mayberry.

What’s the best way to spend a weekend in Brentwood? In the summer, my daughter and I like to walk the trails with our dog – and we spend a lot of days at the Brentwood Swim Club. We like to hang out with our friends there and bring food to grill and share for dinner (along with a glass of wine for me).

44   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com  |

A Ladue News Special Promotion


We love our neighborhoods MAPLEWOOD

The Goldbergs By Kaitlynn Martin | Photo by Sarah Conroy

Mayberry and Metropolis

is Maplewood Heath, Angel, Howard, Gabe and Josh Goldberg

H

oward and Angel Goldberg met in St. Louis, and shortly after, Howard bought an older home in Maplewood. Howard initially hoped to fix up the house, flip it and move on to another project – but that was 17 years ago. The couple has raised their three sons (Gabe, 9, Josh, 15, and Heath, 20) in the home. Angel, a school nurse, and Howard, a real estate lender, enjoy riding their bikes around their neighborhood with their sons and are extremely happy with the high-tech Maplewood Richmond Heights School District.

What has surprised you most about Maplewood? We are pleasantly surprised by how much the school district has turned around. At the time we got here, the schools were kind of rough, and then a few years later, they brought in a new superintendent who has really turned things around. We would not move because we love the school district so much.

What is a local shopping destination in your neighborhood that you love? There’s some really cute little gift shops like Maven. A friend of mine bought a certain kind of lotion there, and she liked it so much that she wanted to buy it for everybody else in the office. She found out that it was the last one in the store, and they said they would make more for her right there. It’s all handmade and great.

FUN EVENTS:

cityofmaplewood.com/fun THE NATION’S FIRST GREEN DINING DISTRICT:

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Why would you encourage others to move to your neighborhood? If people have children, [Maplewood Richmond Heights School District is] a great school district. I love that we have a diverse population. I think that it’s really good for kids to learn about other kids and other types of families. It’s just a really close-knit community. Also, it’s a really great location in St. Louis; we’re close to everything. Heading downtown is about 15 to 20 minutes, and same goes for the airport. Forest Park is five minutes; we can ride our bikes there.

A LADUE NEWS SPECIAL PROMOTION  |  LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   45


We love our neighborhoods RICHMOND HEIGHTS

Nancy Gulick

The Blands By Denise Kruse | Photo by Rachel Closson

Coco, Georgia, Karen, Rory, Jeffrey and Sawyer Bland

Strengthened by the housing market challenge, wise from years of experience and uniquely intuitive of client needs, Nancy Gulick has reached the pinnacle of real estate achievement. A consistent Top Agent with the largest independent luxury real estate firm in St. Louis, Nancy is recognized as an expert in the sought-after central corridor. Nancy’s experience covers both buyers and sellers of residential real estate across all price points and housing types including condominiums, townhomes, villas, single- family detached homes and luxury estates.

Please contact Nancy for a confidential consultation today. 314.623.1915

K

aren Bland, communications and outreach manager for the Olin Business School at Washington University in St. Louis, and husband Jeffrey, general counsel for Abengoa Bioenergy, nearly found themselves in a bidding war for their Richmond Heights home nine years ago. “Clients won!” Karen says. “We loved the perfect location – right by Clayton, Ladue and Highway 40, easy to get everywhere, but a cute, quiet little street,” Karen says of her family’s home. The street’s cul-de-sac also has been great for their kids: Coco, 7, Georgia, 10, Sawyer, 11, and Rory, 12.

What is your favorite aspect of living in Richmond Heights? We love the location (central to everything) and the fact that we’re part of the Ladue School District. It’s central to everything – location, location, location, right? It’s a 6-minute drive to my gym, Iron Tribe Fitness, in Brentwood; 12 minutes to Wash U., where I work; and 15 minutes to my husband’s office in Chesterfield. Not to mention, having four kids puts us at the orthodontist monthly – and our orthodontist is nearby at The Boulevard!

Where are your favorite local spots? We love Sportsman’s Park in Ladue, Pastaria in Clayton and Starbucks and Panera in The Galleria mall. For date night, we head to Boundary for dinner or a drink at Weber Grill.

What are some of your children’s favorite spots in or around Richmond Heights? P.F. Chang’s, Five Guys, Nordstrom and Tropicana Bowling.

What’s the best way to spend a weekend in Richmond Heights? janet mcafee inc. l 9889 clayton road l saint louis, missouri 63124 l 314.997.4800 I www.janetmcafee.com

46   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com  |

A LADUE NEWS SPECIAL PROMOTION

Shop at The Galleria, go for a run through the neighborhoods off of McKnight (between Clayton and Highway 40) and grab a smoothie from Nadoz.


We love our neighborhoods UNIVERSITY CITY

The Footes By Kaitlynn Martin | Photo courtesy Kristi Hollowell of Fresh Light STL

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Ethan, Emerson, Julie, Steve, Gavin and Austin Foote

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ulie and Steve Foote, along with their four sons (Emerson, 11, Gavin, 13, Ethan, 16, and Austin, 18), have lived in University City for 15 years. Julie grew up in Greenfield, Indiana, and Steve grew up primarily in Kansas City, but now, University City is very much their home. The character-filled historic homes in the neighborhood initially drew the couple in, as did the proximity to Washington University. But there are countless other reasons why the Foote family is proud to call University City their own.

What has surprised you most about your neighborhood? The wonderful mix of native St. Louisans and transplants from across the U.S. and around the globe. There are very few places in the country where you can find a neighborhood like University City.

What restaurants do you enjoy dining at in University City? This question is difficult, because there are so many amazing restaurants in University City, but we have our favorites. Público, because Mike Randolph delivers a transcendent dining-and-cocktail experience. Winslow’s Home is a quick stroll down Delmar to experience delicious food and alfresco dining. Salt + Smoke – we fell in love with Tom Schmidt at Franco. The barbecue is amazing, and Steve loves the bourbon selection. Mission Taco is absolutely the best tacos and margaritas in St. Louis. And finally, La Pizza is hands down the best New York-style pizza in the area.

What is a local shop or destination in your neighborhood that you love? The Saturday morning Midtown Farmers Market in the Loop. It has great fresh fruits and vegetables, flowers, local farm-raised pork and baked goods.

What is your neighborhood’s best-kept secret? Christ the King Catholic School would have to be University City’s best-kept secret. We’ve sent all four of our boys there, and we’ve loved the small classroom learning environment and how well prepared they’ve been for high school.

7480 Delmar at Hanley 727-0830 marquardscleaners.com 10730 Indian Head Industrial Blvd. - 428-3700 9644 Clayton Rd. - 993-3599 7719 Clayton Rd. -727-6060 14380 S. Outer 40 Rd. - 576-4141 A LADUE NEWS SPECIAL PROMOTION  |  LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   47


BUYING or We love our neighborhoods SELLING? OLIVETTE

Steve Mathes, CRS,GRI Broker / Sales Associate 314-503-6533 Cell 314-997-3412 Office stevemathes@realtor.com stevemathes.com

The Bluchers

By Kaitlynn Martin | Photo by Yana Hotter‌, Spoonful of Sugar Photography

Joe Mathes, JD

Sales Associate 314-276-1604 Cell 314-993-8000 Office joe.mathes@gmail.com

SOLd

neW hOMe COMing SOOn!

neW hOMe COMing SOOn!

Lucas, Jordan, Jodi, Mark, Macy and Noah Blucher

1 briar Oak, Ladue

Just completed…custom built by Dublen on 1.4-acre secluded wooded site. 1.5-story, four bedrooms, 4 full & 2 half baths, and 4 car garage with all the finest finishes....$1,865,000 neW hOMe COMing SOOn!

10147 FieLdCreST Lane, Ladue

New 4BD, 3 bath, ranch custom home to be built by MC Modern Concepts. 3,200 SF on .57-acre cul-de-sac lot....$899,900

533 FairWayS CirCLe, Creve COeur

Eight year new, 1.5-story custom home by Berkley with 4 BD, 7,000+ SF on three levels, backing to Creve Coeur Golf Course!....$1,349,500 neW LiSTing!

1 Ladue ManOr, Ladue

Professional ranch renovation situated on a .71-acre wooded walkout lot. Approximately 3,550 square feet of living area with 5 BD including the Fin LL plus the Home Protection Plan.

....$849,500

neW hOMe COMing SOOn!

495 SCheLL rd, auguSTa

Stunning 2-story farmhouse on 5.55-acres. 4 BD, 2 full and 2 half baths, 3,455 SF in wine country with million dollar views plus the Home Protection Plan.....$649,000 neW LiSTing!

10144 FieLdCreST Lane, Ladue

New custom home to be built on premier level wooded .41-acre cul-de-sac lot! By Dominion Homes with 4BD, 3.5 bath, 1.5-story with 3,349 SF....$939,500 JuST COMPLeTed neW hOMe!!

8 FOrSyThia Lane, OLiveTTe

10124 FieLdCreST Lane, Ladue

New custom home to be built by Dominion Homes 4BD, 3.5 bath, 1.5-story, 3,200 SF, .34-acre lot. One of nine new homes to be built in neighborhood.....$899,900 under COnTraCT

16 WeSTWOOd COunTry CLub grOundS, WeSTWOOd

Golden opportunity to renovate or New custom home by ARKO—Just teardown and build new—spacious 5 BD, 5 bath, 2-story with approx. completed in Ladue Schools. 4,589 SF of space on 3 levels sitting Two-story, 4 BD, 3.5 baths, on spectacular 1.72-acres backing 3,700 SF. .46-acre. Loaded with to Westwood Country Club Golf Course. (17th hole).....$675,000 upgrades.....$749,500 SOLd

SOLd

750 Cherry Tree Lane, 237 Weybridge drive, 110 PLanTaTiOn drive, OLiveTTe Creve COeur Creve COeur Fabulous just completed (Ladue SChOOLS) Updated 4 BD, English Tudor Teardown-New home to be built by Berkley. Two story, 4 BD, 2.5 Baths. Opportunity to custom build in lovely tree lined infill neighborhood in Ladue schools.....$629,000

professional four bedroom, three bath ranch renovation! Approximately 3,070 SF on two levels, .48-acre wooded site and the Home Protection Plan.....$524,500

charmer with .96-acre level wooded lot, pond and foot bridge, Home Protection Plan, and 3,500 SF on three levels.....$439,500

O

riginally from New Jersey and New York, Jodi and Mark Blucher moved to the St. Louis area for Mark’s job as a surgeon at Mercy Hospital. The couple has now lived in Olivette for going on 10 years and has two sons (Lucas, 15, and Noah, 18) and two daughters (Macy, 11, and Jordan, 13). Although the family is far from their relatives, the Bluchers have found Olivette full of neighbors who have come to feel like family.

Why did you choose to live in Olivette? We wanted to build a house, and we also chose Olivette because of the school district, due to the diversity. Olivette is also closer to the things we like to do, such as going into the city. It was a combination between Mark wanting a backyard and me wanting to be closer to the city.

What do you love most about your neighborhood? I would have to say the people – the people and parks. It’s nice that we have a park that is within walking distance of our house. We aren’t from here, so our neighbors have sort of become our family. We celebrate holidays together. I would say our neighborhood is very close-knit.

JuST COMPLeTed neW hOMe!!

Why would you encourage people unfamiliar with Olivette to move to your neighborhood? 9734 bOnhOMMe eSTaTeS OLiveTTe (Ladue SChOOLS) Outstanding 4 BD, 2 bath ranch on wooded .45-acre cul-de-sac lot in adjacent to Stacy Park and across the street from Old Bonhomme Elementary School.....$415,000 under COnTraCT

1140 COLLingWOOd Lane, OLiveTTe (Ladue SChOOLS)

New custom home recently completed! 3 BD, 2.5 bath, 1.5-story with granite kitchen, luxury baths, wood floors. Move-in ready.....$349,999

750 SOuTh hanLey rOad #310, CLayTOn

Beautiful renovated Claytonian Condo in the heart of Clayton. Move-in condition!...$325,000

7614 deLMar bOuLevard, univerSiTy CiTy

Move-in ready! Two-story charmer with three bedrooms, two baths, renovated kitchen and baths, fenced yard, wood floors, flagstone patio, and the Home Protection Plan.....$259,900

Residential lots FoR sale 10101 Fieldcrest Lane, Ladue: .40-acre building lot in the Heart of Ladue. ..........................................................$225,000

3582 ruby ST. CharLeS

Spacious 3 BD, 2.5 bath, 2-story home with 2,514 SF, oversized two-car garage, main floor laundry, patio and fenced yard. Home Protection Plan!....$249,900

The area is turning over from older to younger. I think the school district we are in is excellent, because it’s part of the Ladue School District. Although there aren’t many restaurants in and around Olivette, Sugarfire Smoke House is an awesome place to get barbecue in our neighborhood.

10116 Fieldcrest Lane, Ladue: .34-acre building lot in the Heart of Ladue. ..........................................................$225,000 SOLd - 10111 Fieldcrest Lane, Ladue: .34-acre building lot in the Heart of Ladue......................................................$225,000

48   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

What is your neighborhood’s best-kept secret? Olivette on the Go! is the carnival that happens every year. It’s a weeklong event. There’s a talent show and usually a run and other things planned around it. It takes place at the end of September, and our family goes every year. The kids like wristband night because they get to go on all the carnival rides.


We love our neighborhoods Central West End

The Joneses By Kaitlynn Martin | Photo by Bryan Schraier‌

Taryn, Corey, Sheila and Fallon Jones

F

or Sheila and Corey Jones, 2017 marks 10 years of calling the Central West End home. Born and raised in Dublin, Ireland, Sheila moved to New York City in 1994, where she met Corey, a St. Louis native. After Corey accepted a position in St. Louis, the two relocated to the Central West End, where their two daughters – Fallon, 8, and Taryn, 10 – have grown up. Accessibility to a variety of restaurants and shops, the friendliness of their community and the local school that their daughters love are just a few of the reasons the family finds their neighborhood a special place to live.

Why did you choose to live in the Central West End? Coming from New York, we wanted to be able to walk places. I didn’t want to have to get in my car to get a coffee. And our oldest was just a year old when we moved, so I wanted to be able to get out and push the stroller around and see people. I am not one of those people who wants solitude and privacy; I want to know my neighbors and see them.

What has surprised you most about living in the Central West End? I am surprised with how quickly I found my place here. We moved here for Corey’s job, so I didn’t really want to leave the East Coast and the type of life we had there. When we moved here, I was pleasantly surprised, and I’m still surprised at how much I like it and the community we have and all the friends we are surrounded with.

What is a local shop or boutique in your neighborhood that you enjoy? There are tons of local places, from small jewelers to a place that sells high-end cashmere. One place, called Fellenz Antiques, looks like a junkyard, but it’s an antique salvage place. You have to wear your dirty clothes, put on gloves and bring a flashlight to make the most of it. But if you really look for something, it’s probably there. You can easily lose three or four hours there.

A Ladue News Special Promotion  |  LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   49


We love our neighborhoods Des Peres

The Decks By Kaitlynn Martin | Photo by Sarah Conroy‌

Stella, Julia, Liliana, Miles and David Deck

J

ulie and David Deck moved to Des Peres seven years ago. As their three children (Stella, 7, Miles, 10, and Liliana, 11) neared school age, Julie and David put finding a great public school at the top of their list. Des Peres proved to be the best fit for them, from the diversity of the Kirkwood School District to the parks and countless places to visit within walking distance of their home.

Why did you choose to live in Des Peres? When our oldest child reached school age, we knew that we wanted our kids to go to Kirkwood schools for both their strong academic reputation and for the district’s diversity. We wanted to be part of an active, engaged, positive community where people know their neighbors and give back to others around them. Living here has definitely provided that for us, and we are grateful to be able to raise our kids here.

Why would you encourage others to move to your neighborhood? I love how centrally located it is. When we have people that come into town for a visit, it’s so easy for them to commute and hop on 40 and go to the zoo or other places downtown. The fact that we can walk our dogs, ride our bikes or jog up to the park to play sports or meet up with friends has been such a healthy, family-focused bonus.

What restaurants and amenities do you enjoy in Des Peres? My oldest daughter is in middle school, and she can walk to The Daily Bread Bakery & Café and meet up with friends, and I feel comfortable with her doing that because it’s a nice community place where she is always running into familiar faces. We have The Village Bar where we go to meet up with friends for a drink, and it’s within walking distance to us. The Lodge is a big place in the summer to go swimming.

What is your neighborhood’s best-kept secret? Our favorite hidden gem in Des Peres is the summer concert series held at Des Peres Park. We walk with our lawn chairs, coolers and blankets in hand to meet other friends in the community to enjoy nights listening to music and having a picnic in a beautiful setting.

50   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com  |

A Ladue News Special Promotion


1

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LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   51


localLISTINGS

‌ 00 S. Brentwood Blvd., 2 No. 15A | CLAYTON

TOWN AND COUNTRY

21 Brookwood Road |

Jilly Malley-Cohen & Karen Seigel Laura McCarthy Real Estate 314-277-9568 (Malley-Cohen), 314-413-4092 (Seigel), 314-725-5100 (office), lauramccarthy.com

Mark Gellman & Neil Gellman The Gellman Team Coldwell Banker Premier Group 2203 S. Big Bend Blvd., 314-336-1991, thegellmanteam.com

By Amanda Dahl

24 Enfield Road | OLIVETTE

8 Forsythia Lane | OLIVETTE

The Lizzy Dooley Group Laura McCarthy Real Estate 314-680-1426 (direct), 314-725-5100 (office), lauramccarthy.com

Steve Mathes & Joe Mathes Coldwell Banker Gundaker 314-503-6533 (Steve), 314-276-1604 (Joe), stevemathes.com

You’ll fall in love with this wonderfully

Residing on a lovely wooded walk-out

updated home, showcasing a spacious

site within the Ladue School District, this

This spacious condo has been updated, and

Situated on 3 acres of manicured grounds,

master suite, with lofted ceilings, French

brand-new custom home by ARKO offers 4

offers 3 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms, with

this spectacular 7-bedroom, 11-bathroom

doors, a huge walk-in closet and a private

bedrooms and 3.5 bathrooms. The 2-story

a laundry unit installed. Located within a

custom home wows with 10,800-plus square

bath. The property’s open floor plan allows

abode comes loaded with upgrades,

desirable area, the abode is an easy walk

feet of living space. Marvel at its coffered

for flawless entertaining inside the large

including a gourmet kitchen, with center

from the trendy shops, notable restaurants

great room or gourmet kitchen, with an

kitchen through to the great room and

island, a luxury master suite and laundry

and hopping area of Clayton.

oversized center island, granite counters,

even onto the outdoor deck. $499,000

rooms found on both floors. $749,500

Wolf range and indoor grill. Luxuriate in the coffered master suite and more.

10088 Litzsinger Road | LADUE Ann Wroth & Holly Bry Gladys Manion Real Estate 314-440-0212 (Wroth), 314-276-7727 (Bry), 314-721-4755 (office), gladysmanion.com This magnificent Higginbotham-built home

561 Sarah Lane, No. 304 | CREVE COEUR Lisa Coulter & Linda Benoist Janet McAfee Real Estate 314-941-2883 (Coulter), 314-504-5495 (Benoist), janetmcafee.com/lisacoulter

5 Wendover Drive | LADUE The Lizzy Dooley Group Laura McCarthy Real Estate 314-680-1426 (direct), 314-725-5100 (office), lauramccarthy.com An absolute charmer, this 4-bedroom

sits majestically on 2.5-plus parklike acres,

Freshly painted and newly carpeted, this

home resides on almost an acre and boasts

featuring a pool, a pool house, a hot tub

fabulous 2-bedroom, 2-bathroom condo

updated en suite bathrooms for every

and gardens. The property’s classic design

features a bright and spacious floor plan,

bedroom, plus a bonus playroom on the

incorporates Old World craftsmanship

with in-unit laundry as an added bonus.

second floor. From hardwood floors to

with a mix of formal and casual spaces,

Enjoy additional amenities, including a

the stately living room and elegant master

creating the perfect place for entertaining

community pool and game room, 2 parking

suite, with a private office, this fabulous

and everyday living.

spaces and a secure storage room. You’re

residence has much to offer. $825,000

sure to love living in this popular area.

52   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com  |

A LADUE NEWS SPECIAL PROMOTION


neighborhood experts

‌The Cindy Baker Team Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Alliance Real Estate

314-504-0933 (Cindy), 314-858-0123 (Gene), wesellmorehomes@yahoo.com, gene.thecindybakerteam@yahoo.com The Cindy Baker Team sold more than $23 million in sales volume for 2016, with 60-plus percent of homes sold in the Ballwin and West County areas. If you’re considering a move, don’t make a move without them! The Cindy Baker Team is

By Amanda Dahl

Kim Carney

Ellen Dolan & Jill Azar

The Monschein Team

Coldwell Banker Premier Group

Laura McCarthy Real Estate

314-422-7449 thecarneyteam.com

314-799-5476 (Dolan), 314-616-8836 (Azar), 314-725-5100 (office),

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Alliance Real Estate

17050 Baxter Road, No. 200, 636-537-8288,

lauramccarthy.com

motherandson.com

school district. The neighborhood always

“Webster Groves is filled with graceful

“When it comes to West County – and

will be considered one of the most

homes, quaint shops, outstanding

Wildwood, in particular – [consider us]

prestigious ZIP codes in St. Louis. Raised in

schools, fabulous restaurants and unique

neighborhood experts,” Kristi and JT

Ladue, Kim Carney is raising her own family

community events. The ease of life is

Monschein agree. They have represented

there and continues to be one of its top-

prominent,” Ellen Dolan and Jill Azar agree.

thousands of sellers and buyers moving in,

selling agents.

“We walk to stores, to dinner and even to

out and within the area over the course of

school with our children. People love to call

the last several decades. “We practically

Webster Groves home!”

know every street by heart.”

A most sought-after area, Ladue is known for beautiful homes and an exceptional

here for all your real estate needs.

Proud to be Locally Owned and Operated Since 1936

314.721.4755 | gladysmanion.com

162 North Central Avenue | Offered at $2,750,000 Outstanding custom Ellerman built home desirably located in Old Town Clayton. Stunning neutral decor and updated throughout boasting a vestibule, two-story entry foyer, main level master suite, office, open living room, dining room, gourmet kitchen, screened porch, 4 additional bedrooms on second level, finished lower level with recreation room and catering kitchen. Additional features include an elevator, patio, fenced yard, oversized 2-car garage. Walk to shops and restaurants and enjoy living in this beautiful home and all that Clayton has to offer. It doesn’t get any better than this!

Holly Bry

314.276.7727

HollyB@Gladysmanion.com

A Ladue News Special Promotion  |  LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   53


distinctive

PROPERTY

37 Washington Terrace

‌E

By Amanda Dahl

THIS 7-BEDROOM, 4 FULL-BATHROOM AND 2 HALF-BATHROOM HOME IN ST. LOUIS IS LISTED FOR $1.35 MILLION. BETH SCHULTZ 314-609-3855 (direct), 314-725-0009 (office), beth.schultz@sir.com, dielmannsothebysrealty.com Dielmann Sotheby’s International Realty combines the local expertise of a boutique agency with the global connections of a centuries-old brand. The company is proud to be the St. Louis affiliate of the Sotheby’s International Realty network, an international collection of real estate companies chosen for their history and reputation of providing a high level of client services. The services of 100 agents and its global resources make Dielmann Sotheby’s unique in the St. Louis market.

54   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com  |

A LADUE NEWS SPECIAL PROMOTION

SCAN CODE BELOW FOR MORE ABOUT THIS DISTINCTIVE PROPERTY

HOME INTERIOR PHOTOS BY ERIC RIDGE; EXTERIORS BY TOM CHLEBOWSKI

xquisitely placed along one of the grandest enclaves in all of St. Louis, this magnificent estate, a 1903 Renaissance Revival-styled home, is proudly listed on the National Registry of Historic Places. Acclaimed architects Weber & Groves utilized ornate old-world craftsmanship to create this masterpiece of a residence, from carved cherub embellishments and pocket doors to dramatic fireplaces and a leaded-glass window seat. What matters most is the warm, welcoming feeling that embraces you as you walk through the immaculate property. Whether you dally out on the brick patio or poolside with tea in hand, or host a marvelous dinner party in the fancy dining room, with its Waterford chandelier, serenity lingers throughout your tour. Imagine waking in the master suite, with custom walk-in closets and the original marble bath, then bidding the sun “good morning” inside the circular solarium. Every day will feel grand inside this distinctive home.


56 ON TREND

Style 57

60

FEATURE: WEBSTER WAX

BEAUTY BUZZ

Wicked PHOTO BY SARAH CONROY

Good(s)!

LadueNews.com | FEBRUARY 3, 2017

55


On Trend

La Vie en Rose

T-shirt, $32, Splash (splashtribe.com)

By Katie Yeadon

With Valentine’s Day fast approaching, boutiques are carrying a plethora of festive products to commemorate that hearty holiday – so break out your pink and red to show the love all month long!

Staccato dress, $68, Paperdolls (paperdolls.boutique) Earrings, $395, Neiman Marcus

Bag, $398; Strap,

(neimanmarcus.com)

$128, Kate Spade (katespade.com)

Scarf, $98, Kate Spade

Karina Grimaldi top, $218, Cha Boutique (shop-cha.com)

Joie blouse, $248,

Choker, $24.50, Paperdolls

Derek Lam sweater, $495, Neiman Marcus

56

FEBRUARY 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

PHOTOS BY SARAH CONROY

Neiman Marcus


Fresh F agrances

r

Story by Julia Cain | Photos by Sarah Conroy


I really love developing fragrances that are able to trigger an emotion. – sharlene KIndt

58

february 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com


Webster Groves-based Webster Wax makes a range of pleasing and aromatic personal-care and home products.

S

harlene Kindt has a strong sense of smell. Even as a child growing up in Missouri, she says, she could spot scents undetected by others. And when you have a gift like that, there’s one logical career path: perfumes. Kindt, now living in Webster Groves with her husband, is the artisan behind the one-woman show that is Webster Wax. “As I grew older, I gravitated toward quality fragrances; I traveled to Grasse, France, and was inspired by the perfume industry and the entire process of creating scents – which is both a science and an art,” Kindt says. “I always loved working with my hands and started toying with the idea of creating my own fragrances. After I was happy with a few fragrances, I wondered how else these fragrances could be applied. I wanted to make products that I myself loved, and candles were the first thing that came to mind. Something about that tiny open flame is so calming and comforting.” Webster Wax is a line of personal-care and home items including soy candles, coffee scrubs, perfume, body and beard oils, lip balm, and face mist. Products range from $5 to $15 and are packaged in minimalist containers with simple black labels. “Everything – from custom fragrances down to the labels – is directly designed and made by me,” Kindt says. Kindt, a Fenton native, moved to Webster Groves when she got married. “I wanted to pay homage to the town where I live and create my product, [and] wax is also the main ingredient in many of my products, so I thought Webster Wax was a perfect name,” she says. The soy candles were Kindt’s first creation. In addition to the economic and community benefits of supporting local artisans, soy candles like those from Webster Wax have perks all their own, including a longer and cleaner burn than their paraffin counterparts. “When you are making candles in small batches, you are able to control the quality of every candle that is made,” Kindt says. “Many large candle companies add fragrance only to the top layer of wax to cut cost. You won’t find those practices at Webster Wax. I guarantee that my candles are scented all of the way through. I can promise that because I pour them myself.” The newest product offered from Webster Wax is beard oil. Created with vitamin E, as well as avocado and jojoba oils, it sells for $10 and comes in four scents named after beard-associated professions like Lumberjack and Stunt Driver. Kindt explains that she wanted the line to include products that excited both women and men, and she notes potentially expanding this in the future with spray cologne and hair pomade. “I really love developing fragrances that are able to trigger an emotion,” Kindt says. Webster Wax’s website tells the charming story of her grandfather, who worked as a lawn mower repairman after retirement and always smelled of gasoline and motor oil. Negative smells to some, these are some of her early memories of scent and positive association. “Smell is so closely tied to our memories and experiences – that one fragrance is able to trigger something different in everyone who smells it, that’s really as powerful as a piece of music or painting or film that moves the viewer,” Kindt continues.

Up next for Webster Wax is a face serum. “I love using serums and am excited about introducing the benefits to my customers,” Kindt says, noting they absorb faster and penetrate deeper than many other facial products. “I just moved into a small studio in Webster Groves, and I am working on setting up appointment-only shopping. I’m really excited about this because it allows customers to come smell and sample my entire line and purchase any product on the spot.” Although Kindt says she is not formally trained in beauty products, she notes that her fine arts education “is informing my process. In a way, I’m substituting

paints and canvas and using fragrances as my paints and wax as the canvas. Art is a combination of process, technique and creativity, and making candles is no different.” Outside of her website, these candles are available at Crafty in St. Charles, and the entire collection is stocked at Ladue’s Shine Boutique and Red Door Furniture Co. in St. Charles. More stores are in the works, Kindt says. Outside of Webster Wax, she works with her husband, Matt Kindt, as the colorist for his visually stunning comic book series Dept. H, which she describes as “a haunting underwater murder mystery.” “In that way, I’m able to still scratch the visual-artist itch and also explore the nonvisual arts with Webster Wax,” says Kindt. “I’m lucky enough to be able to balance two dream jobs.” websterwax.com

LadueNews.com | february 3, 2017

59


Valentine’s Day Goodies!

BEAUTY BUZZ

DOT DOT DASH BOUTIQUE

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The Spa is Open to the Public Clayton | 314.746.1501 Town & Country | 636.207.3001 * $20 Bonus card is only valid on services over $50. One voucher per person, per day, per transaction, and must be presented at time of checkout. Not redeemable for cash or valid with any other offers or discounts. Not valid for purchase of gift certificates, gratuity, retail. No change or credit will be issued for any unused balance. We are not responsible for lost or stolen cards. Bonus dollars available February 15, 2017-April 30, 2017. Bonus card cannot be re-issued for any reason. ©2017 Wellbridge

‌With the Academy Awards only three weeks or so away, celebs of both sexes are getting “red-carpet-ready” – enjoying weekly facials, say, or taking hair and nail appointments booked months in advance. You may be asking yourself, “How can I achieve celebrities’ Oscar-worthy glamour without spending thousands of dollars?” By way of an answer, consider this quintet of tips and tricks: Tip 1: Exfoliate and use face masks. For an appealing facial glow, remove dead skin with an exfoliator with little beads in it or a sugar scrub. Once you’ve exfoliated your face, use a hydrating sheet mask. Sheet masks remoisturize skin and make it really glow. (I suggest practicing this mini regimen weekly, by the way.) Tip 2: Self-tan. To enjoy the red carpet’s beautiful, bronzed glam after exfoliating, add a tan to your skin. But you needn’t visit a commercial tanner to do so; instead, self-tan in the comfort of your own home. A tan makes your skin look healthy and beautiful – and makes you appear thinner. Tip 3: Use hair gloss. Celebs always seem to have perfect, shiny coifs, and noncelebs, too, can achieve that look by getting hair glosses. When you visit the beauty salon next, request a gloss treatment to make your own do look shiny and beautiful – just like your favorite celeb’s tresses. Tip 4: Ditch the sugar and dairy. For tiptop skin, drop sugar and dairy from your diet a few weeks before your event. Why? Well, you don’t want dermal breakouts ambushing you, so cut the foods that cause such breakouts. Tip 5: Be your own manicurist. You’d never catch a celeb on the red carpet without lush-looking nails, and you can easily approximate celebs’ digital glitz by giving yourself an at-home manicure. Make sure to add a bit of beauty oil to your cuticles once your nails dry, though, to keep them soft and hydrated. To look red-carpet-ready year-round, not just at Oscar time, practice these tips regularly. To look your best for an upcoming event, in fact, try putting these tips into effect a few months beforehand. And never forget that the best trick to looking red-carpet-ready, with or without an actual red carpet, involves letting your inner confidence shine!

ln

60   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

PHOTO BY GENNARO LEONARDI‌

Special

By Kimmie Gotch


A SPECIAL

Style

PROMOTION

Fashion Forward

Marta’s Boutique in Ladue and Ellisville will host Joseph Ribkoff trunk shows on Feb. 8 and 9 for customers to preview the new spring line and place orders in advance. Marta’s has been carrying designer Joseph Ribkoff’s work for more than 20 years and hosts two trunk shows a year for customers to get a sneak peek at what’s new for the season. For more information, call 314-721-3056 for the Ladue location or 636-227-8831 for the Ellisville location.

LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   61


Cold Weather Wear: Feature Story

Blooming Marta’s Boutique

M

arta’s Boutique has been a passion of founder Marta Gaska’s for more than 34 years. The family-owned business just keeps growing, with locations in Ladue and Ellisville. Gaska attributes the boutique’s success to a loyal customer base and its brands. One such brand is Joseph Ribkoff, which the boutique has carried for more than 20 years. Customers will have the chance to check out Ribkoff’s spring line before it hits stores, at a trunk show on Feb. 8 at the Ladue location and another Feb. 9 at the Ellisville location, both from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. “[Joseph Ribkoff] is an amazing company to work with,” Gaska says. “Their staff and customer service is amazing, which is what I thrive on. They take care of their clients like they know them personally.” Gaska says that Ribkoff’s styles are “endless” and

62

With style W

By robyn dexter | Photos courtesy of Marta’s Marta s Boutique

that his designs work on every age group. She also notes that all of his pieces are machine washable, and they pack and travel “unbelievably well.” “There’s new excitement for every season,” Gaska says. “This spring’s line features a lot of nauticalinspired pieces and a lot of bright colors.” Gaska emphasizes that the spring line features many pieces that would be excellent statement pieces for someone’s wardrobe. When customers come to the store, the boutique’s stylists can show them how to wear the pieces in a variety of ways. “Our stylists are incredible and can help you put outfits together,” Gaska says. She notes that Ribkoff’s fabrics always match, so if customers find something in the spring line that they like, they will probably find an accompanying jacket in a later line that matches. Marta’s Boutique offers two trunk shows a year for Joseph Ribkoff: one in the spring, and one

february 3, 2017 | ladueNews.com | a ladue news special promotion

in the fall. These trunk shows give the customer the opportunity to preview the entire line, not just the select pieces the boutique might carry. A representative from Joseph Ribkoff also will be on hand to answer any questions. “Trunk shows detail a full line,” Gaska says. “If a line has 100 pieces, we might buy only 50 [to carry in the store].” After the trunk show, Gaska says she’s looking forward to putting the cold weather behind her and moving forward into spring. “January and February are tough in retail, but if you visit our stores, you’ll see that the boutique is starting to bloom in color already,” she says. “It’s the perfect time to add a spring piece or two and get excited to move into spring.” Marta’s Boutique, 8827 Ladue Road, 314-721-3056; 1352 Clarkson Clayton Center, 636-227-8831


fashions &

accessories

‌DITTO

10027 Manchester Road, 314-394-2026, dittostl.com

From chunky chains to beaded beauties and delicate necklaces, Ditto offers a unique diversity in its adornments, thanks to a revolving inventory of preloved items.

By Amanda Dahl

LAURIE’S SHOES

MARTA’S BOUTIQUE

9810 Clayton Road, 314-997-6161, pinkmagnoliashop.com

Manchester Road; Saint Louis Galleria; Chesterfield Mall, lauriesshoes.com

1352 Clarkson Clayton Center, 636-227-8831; 8827 Ladue Road, 314-721-3056

Grab your most glamorous pair of sunglasses …

Be in step with spring this year in a pair of suede

This transitional tunic takes you from day to night,

With plenty of room to store waterside essentials,

Mephisto sandals. Their cagey design and neutral color

with an edgy partial front-zip closure and versatile

Lilly Pulitzer’s printed neoprene tote is ready to go

ensure an effortless wardrobe transition with the new

side pockets. Pair with white pants and bold earrings

somewhere sunny!

season.

for an ultrachic look.

PINK MAGNOLIA

Are your nails ready?

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in print? like us on facebook facebook.com/ ladue news

Celebrate Valentine’s Day with the per fect Manicure and Pedicure

Spa Mani & Pedi $60 [$23 Value]

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A LADUE NEWS SPECIAL PROMOTION  |  LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   63


WILSONLIGHTING.COM

Risk Consulting PaRtneRs names Vice President Risk Consulting Partners (RCP) – St. Louis, Chicago & Dallas has named Monica Griffy as Vice President and Private Client Practice Leader of their private client group division. This announcement is key to RCP’s vision of continued growth and expansion into the personal lines market. Monica brings 20+ years of industry experience to the RCP family. Her career has been heavily focused on the private risk management of high net worth clients and the development of personalized programs that ensure the unique circumstances of each client can be assessed and the best solutions put in place to protect against and or mitigate the risk. For more information visit www.rcpholdings.com or contact Monica directly at 314-492-4309

hot trend? Icy lighting. Bring the outdoors inside with stunning crystal icicle pendants from Wilson Lighting. We offer a variety of styles and sizes. Each designed to melt your heart.

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Easy access thru CVS off Clayton Rd.

L I G H T I N G

64   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

CRAVETHECUP.COM


66 GAME ON!

T he Daily 67

68

KIDS MD

FEATURE: SHARED PARENTING

Doing

Dad Duty LadueNews.com | FEBRUARY 3, 2017

65


Game ON!

‌W

e are going to know shortly if we are a Major League Soccer (MLS) city or not. I hate to be negative, but it would be just like our town to blow this. We have a commissioner of the MLS who has expressed his love for our city. We have a soccer history perhaps like no other city in the country. We have a group of men who are willing to sink $240 million into the project. Yet it looks bleak as I write this. I have been told without some kind of public money, the project will die. We have a governor who couldn’t be more against public funding for stadiums. We have a board of alderman who don’t seem to see the value for the city. We have a county that doesn’t want to pay a single dime for a stadium, which will be used more by its residents than people from other areas of the region. We have to find a way. Three words: Find a way. This is a competition, with 10 cities vying for two expansion teams. It shouldn’t be OK to get our rear ends kicked by perhaps Nashville, Sacramento and Cincinnati. Here is the thing that really jumps out at me: Many are under the impression that these people from SCSTL are doing this to get rich. No, it’s to enrich the city. These men could stick all their money in Apple stock and get a whole lot richer a whole lot sooner. Teams lose money annually. The only way to make money is to hang on long enough to where you’re

By Frank Cusumano

making a profit. This project is at least 10 years from making money. The best way to explain this is to say the ownership group is investing $240 million (of debt and equity) into a franchise that’s worth $150 million today. It could eventually be a great business. However, MLS teams don’t have a license to print money. There are no billion-dollar television packages. So what if there’s no public money? I asked this question on my radio show the other day. The project is $120 million short. What if Stan Kroenke came in and provided the money to get the MLS team? Would you rather have no MLS or the MLS with Kroenke? I would go without. Stay away, Stan. By the way, there’s no talk about him getting involved. Besides, if he did, that would guarantee St. Louis finishing last like all of his other horrible teams.

Five Random Thoughts

1

I saw the movie Fences. It’s well done, with great dialogue. It’s dark, depressing, and Denzel [Washington] is dazzling. They bring out a great angle that unfortunately permeates our society – the combative relationship between fathers and sons. I have never understood it. The easiest thing for a father to do in life is to love his kid(s). How can you not?

2

The University of Missouri has had a brutal twoyear stretch. They need to make a great basketball

coaching hire soon. I feel bad for Kim Anderson, who’s done many great things in the sport of basketball. But a change will be made. Cuonzo Martin is the guy Mizzou should pursue. Overpay him, recruit him and get him. Bring Cuonzo back home.

3

The Winter Classic was a booming success. The Blues need a second act to that. Ken Hitchcock deserves to go out in style. I am concerned about it.

4

The former walk-on from Clemson’s Hunter Renfrow scored the national championship-winning touchdown. If I were running a business, I would look to hire former college athletes who were walk-ons. They’re hungrier. They stay humble. They know the struggle. Walk-ons never forget they had to work harder.

5

My three New Year’s resolutions: Never say a curse word (I’ve already said two), do one generous thing per day and try not to do anything inappropriate on a laptop or television.

ln

Frank Cusumano is a 17-time Emmy Award-winner on KSDK-TV; he also hosts The Pressbox on The All New 590 the Fan from 10 a.m. to noon each weekday and contributes to The Dave Glover Show on FM NewsTalk 97.1. Follow him on Twitter @frank_cusumano.

Your Family. Your Focus. Your Future.

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Allison schreiber Lee St. Louis, Missouri Attorney

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66   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

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The choice of a lawyer should not be based on advertisements alone.


KIDS MD

Getting Dad Involved

‌M

ore so these days than in the past, fathers are taking a role in raising their children, but the degree of involvement still varies. Studies show that children whose dads are truly part of their lives do better in school, have higher self-esteem and engage less in risky behavior. Also, fathers interact with and provide care to their children in manners that differ from maternal concerns, but that have equal importance. Here are a few ways for dads to engage: 1.  Recognize that dad’s not mom – and mom’s not dad. Parenting styles aren’t identical, and that’s OK. Ladies, if you feel your hubby could be more involved, give him specific roles, and set expectations for his participation in care. For instance, ask him to help with homework rather than just saying, “You need to do more with the kids.” 2.  Also, ladies, don’t hover so much. A mom shouldn’t expect a dad to be involved and responsible if she steps in and takes control from him every time care gets difficult. So accept the reality that your spouse may play differently from you and sometimes a little rougher. Don’t assume he’ll hurt the children, though,

ACROSS

By Dr. Joseph Kahn

just because his play’s a little more physical than yours. 3.  At bedtime, reading is always encouraged as part of the routine. And although moms do a great job, research shows children benefit more when dads read to them. A Harvard University study shows questions posed by men when reading to children sparked “imaginative discussions”; also, girls benefit more when read to by a male. 4.  Parents should discipline as equally as possible – no more “Just wait till your father gets home!” In many households, both parents work outside the home and therefore should share in the hard and not-so-fun parts of parenting. 5.  Finally, ladies and gentlemen, support each other. Moms and dads need to be recognized and praised for their efforts, even if such efforts are seemingly just “part of the job.” For more information, refer to the National Fatherhood Imitative at fatherhood.org.

ln

Dr. Joseph Kahn is president of Mercy Kids (mercykids. org), an expansive network of pediatric care dedicated to meeting the needs of every child, every day.

39. — of the town 82. Great Florentine poet 40. Fun for preschoolers: 83. Confine 1. Animals in harness 2 wds. 85. Links aide 5. Fanged creature 41. Arab VIP: Var. 87. Not plumb 10. Manhandled 42. Spruce 88. Hazard 15. Steatite 44. Grief 89. UK county 19. Inter — 45. Porcupine quill 90. Star that flares 20. Summon 48. Yields by treaty 91. Bundle 21. “It is — — told...” 49. Disentangle 94. Violin maker 22. Sphere 50. Horn blasts 95. Soften, in a way 23. Some jewelry: 2 wds. 53. Concentrate 99. Small cake 25. Ian Fleming novel 55. Set about 102. Fastener of a kind 27. Prized 56. Sch. type 104. Desire 28. — -you-ma’am 58. Diplomat’s forte 105. Get lost! 30. Worship 59. Wiener 106. Fast-food order 31. Above-mentioned 60. Holiday song 107. Facilitate 32. Hag 62. Big Ben, for one 108. Marsh plant 33. Wrestling variety 63. Bit of time 109. Bellows 35. Computer sockets 64. Cringe 110. — fit 38. Vessels 65. Dead ringer 111. Puts 39. Jet engine 66. Action-movie staple 43. Bristly animals 67. Serpentine 44. Mustached painter 68. Act like a ham 1. End-of-race marker 45. Compositions for one 69. Angered 2. Yale attendees 46. Ottava — 71. Dieting no-no 3. “— Misbehavin’” 47. Perry’s creator 72. Stand 4. Confirm: 2 wds. 48. Tropical tree: 2 wds. 75. Mr. Kristofferson 5. Cerebellum part 51. Catch 76. Unearthly 6. Like some old buildings 52. Intend or intent 77. Checks and — 7. Pool 53. Lawbreaker 79. Erred 8. Diagnostic aid: Abbr. 54. Like a shivaree 82. Prima donnas 9. Curb 55. Produce 84. Berber 10. Idolaters 57. Extinct animal 85. Parts of some bracelets 11. Make expiation 59. False show 86. Island 12. Constitutional 60. Apium, commonly 87. Hoyden 13. Antiquity 61. Horse in a race 89. False charge 14. Glossary entry: Abbr. 62. Jalopy 90. Deadens 15. Clay oven 63. Money at risk 91. Speak indistinctly 16. Ship of myth 64. Rome’s — Maximus 92. — and hounds 17. Wanton look 66. Europeans 93. Brink 18. Tutelage 67. Fishing boat 94. Taj Mahal site 24. Irish dramatist 70. Leaves unmentioned 95. Drones 26. Metrical foot 71. Gem 96. Dies — 29. Fiery 72. Charged particle 97. Lemon peel 73. “What Kind of Fool — —?” 32. Punctuation mark 98. Ovine animals 33. Besmirch 74. Ashen 100. Neighbor of Syr. 34. — and Thummin 75. Pitcher’s pitch 101. Mil. rank 35. Girder: Hyph. 77. Sci. branch 103. — polloi 36. Water wheel 78. Mayonnaise ingredient 37. Resort city in California: 2 wds. 80. Complete 38. Pancetta 81. Analogous

SHOW OF HANDS

DOWN

Check the Ladue News classifieds for the solution LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   67


Revisiting

Visitation

Rights By Bryan A. Hollerbach

F

A bill newly enActed by the stAte subtly seeks to eAse the perplexities of shAred pArenting.

or juridical delicacy, arguably few matters match child custody, and just last year, Missouri’s lawmakers acted to clarify and refine procedures involving that hot-button topic by passing House Bill No. 1550, generally known as just HB 1550. One problem. As in most legislation, legalese shrouds the nuances and niceties of HB 1550. Happily, two local experts on legal language express guarded optimism about HB 1550, which Missouri’s 98th General Assembly passed last spring. Former Gov. Jeremiah “Jay” Nixon subsequently signed it into law, and it went into effect this past August. The first such expert, Dr. Christine E. Rollins, serves as a professor in the Saint Louis University School of Law and directs the Legal Research and Writing Program there. Rollins first provides background on custody and visitation in general, regarding what legal professionals refer to as “the best interests of the child standard.” “When I teach class, I tell my students that the best interests of the child standard is like stew,” Rollins says cheerily. “Your stew, your mom’s stew, my stew might all look different. You might put barley in it. I might put potatoes. But when you look at the pot, you say, ‘It’s stew.’ “Because whatever is pertinent, whatever is meaningful to that particular child or children, husband, wife, father, mother, in any single case, is going to be taken into account by the court. The guidelines listed in the laws in Missouri are categories of information that a court should, could, may, take into account, but they are not an exclusive or inclusive absolute list of things that the court should take into account.” That said, at least one nonprofit has been lobbying for a better ingredients list on Rollins’ figurative stew. The National Parents Organization – a charitable and educational 501(c)(3) entity focused on “promoting shared parenting, where both parents have equal standing raising children after a separation or divorce” to foster such children’s emotional, mental and physical health, according to its website – has been pushing aggressively for sharedparenting refinements like those enacted by HB 1550. Last May, for instance, that nonprofit ran an op-ed piece in the Columbia Daily Tribune that scathingly denounced “Missouri’s broken family court system.” Ironically in light of that denunciation, Rollins’ legal

68

FEbruary 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

stew has long included an ingredient of potential value to dyspeptic parents, notes the second local expert on legal language, Dr. Joseph A. Cernik. Cernik, a professor of political science and public administration at Lindenwood University in St. Charles, not only chairs the Department of Public Affairs and Administration there but also edits the Missouri Policy Journal, a semiannual publication “focused on issues relevant to Missouri policymakers as well as the public interested with the complexities associated with policymaking,” according to its website. Specifically, Cernik cites Missouri’s Motion for Family Access Order, (online at courts.mo.gov/file.jsp?id=701). “When you go through the existing law information contrasting it with HB 1550, I believe the key difference is these words in the law: ‘A family access motion does not require the assistance of legal counsel to prepare and file,’” he says. “This a slight difference. The law, prior to HB 1550, said an attorney can be involved – not ‘required’ or ‘needed.’ Probably there have been parents who felt that, in the past, they had to use an attorney to help them get access to their child or children, and financially, they could not afford to do that. Here, it’s clear no attorney assistance is needed. “Now, what I’m always wondering about is, just because this tends to help those who cannot afford an attorney, whether this slight change will be publicized well enough to actually make a difference. “My guess is that any real impact would have to come in a court case where an aggrieved party says they did not know about this, and they thought they needed an attorney to gain access to their child or children. In other words, the competency of one’s divorce attorney can be challenged.” Regarding the Motion for Family Access Order, Cernik adds: “Court rules allow a lawyer to help a party with certain specific tasks without handling the entire case for a party. This is called limited scope representation. A lawyer providing limited representation will usually charge a fixed fee or charge by the hour. “So, a small change, but one that might help a few parents who in the past have felt deterred from doing anything because they, automatically, assumed they were going to pay attorney fees.”

Beyond foregrounding information in HB 1550 that might not have been emphasized as prominently in the legal content the new bill replaces, Rollins expands somewhat on other nuances of that piece of legislation, especially with regard to accountability. “Some of the language change in the bill talks more specifically about things that should not exclude a parent from having access to their child,” she says. “The underlying standard that Missouri law uses is that a child should have meaningful, open, ongoing, consistent – there’s a lot of adjectives used – contact with both parents. Unless the court finds that a reason will keep a parent and child apart. “We start with that joint-access concept. And part of the law says if you’re going to restrict it, the trial court needs to tell the parties why they are restricting access. So part of this is very procedural in nature. “The appellate courts want the trial courts to spell out for the mother and the

father why they’re getting what they’re getting or, more importantly, why they’re not getting what they are getting.” At first glance, HB 1550 apparently includes language that, to a nonprofessional eye, sanctions shared custody for a parent accused of domestic violence, a matter Rollins also addresses. “I very much am in strong support of domesticviolence rules and laws and orders of protection,” she


says. “However, sometimes the parties use accusations of domestic violence as weapons. And in fact, parties may consent to what’s called a consent decree – ‘I’ll stay away from you; you stay away from me. I won’t harass you; you won’t harass me.’ But in reality, what they’ve said is ‘I’ve committed domestic violence against you, and I promise not to do it again.’” Under HB 1550, such a decree, which previously might have led either to supervised visitation or to no visitation whatsoever, doesn’t serve as an absolute bar. “The legislation, I think, is saying, ‘No, that’s not an absolute preclusion,’” Rollins continues. “And the court has to do the next step of figuring out what kind of abuse was it, did it affect the child, how would it affect the child? And it’s still OK, court, if you look at the entire situation and you find that it’s in the best interests of the child to have access to that parent, then you’re not going to get in trouble, by the appellate court or somebody else, by granting access to that child.

“And later language in the statute absolutely spells out that they are 100 percent making a determination if custody/visitation is safe for the child, it’s in the best interests of the child. And then they have to spell it out to the parties in the decree.” Like Cernik, Rollins otherwise guardedly praises the fact that HB 1550 better brings to the fore the family access motion. “I think any time you can educate people about their legal self-remedies, it really helps the process,” she says. “It keeps everybody accountable for what’s going on. Family access motions are available to persons to be able to alert the court if the visitation schedule is being thwarted, without the need for hiring an attorney. “And I think that’s just a show of the times. Because we have more families – the divorce rate is about 50 percent – we have more families that are dealing with child support and aging children who are going to vocational school or going to community college or four-year colleges and how that support is supposed to be working out.” Cernik otherwise offers a suggestion for lay readers approaching legal documents in general, not just HB 1550 in specific. “In looking at a lot of these new laws as they come along, you might want to see if at the end of them there is written reference to rulemaking,” he says. “Rules

– in other words, interpretations – come later on to address vague, confusing, contradictory laws. Laws seem clear but usually are not, and the rules are the means to interpret a law and give it some clarity. “When I’m reading laws or bills proposed as laws, I look to see which federal or state agency has been assigned rulemaking capability; it’s usually written in the bill or law. If I don’t see reference to rulemaking, I assume that the assumption is that court cases are expected at some point to give clarity to laws. This is similar to U.S. Supreme Court cases.” For those tempted to think such complications cluster only in lesser legal documents, Cernik continues by citing one of the nation’s fundamental texts. “The Constitution, for example, is filled with lots of vague stuff, and we really rely on the opinions from court cases to provide some clarity to oftentimes incredibly vaguely written words,” he says. “I know that never comes across clearly on TV-news shows because it’s too complicated to take the time to explain. If I say, ‘Article 1, Section 8, Clause 18 as understood from the court case of … ,’ well, you’ll never see me on TV again because I just confused the audience with what is closer to what really happens.” Cernik concludes pragmatically that his commentary constitutes “just some guidance in struggling through future bills and laws. I don’t think it ever gets easier.”


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LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   71


STL LAW FIRMS: Feature Story

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decision By Amanda Dahl | Photo by Sarah Conroy

T

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A LADUE NEWS SPECIAL PROMOTION  |  LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   73


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Financial factors to consider when getting a divorce St a n g e L a w F i r m , P C

Couples who are ending their marriage will consider a great many different issues. Finances can be contentious and difficult whether it is a high asset divorce or one of more modest means. Property division, spousal support and other factors will come to the forefront in a divorce. This is particularly true when people over the age of 50 are getting a divorce. Statistics are indicating that these divorces are on the rise. With that in mind, the issues that come up with them should be taken into account. Between the years 1990 and 2010, the number of people age 50 and older who were getting a divorce doubled. This information comes from Bowling Green University’s National Center for Family and

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gest that people who are planning for their financial future as a couple also keep in mind the potential that the marriage could at some point end. While this is sensible, many might not want to invite dispute with such a decision. For those who are considering divorce and are worried about their finances, it is wise to have legal help to try and come to a resolution that can be beneficial. With this in mind, it is important to contact an attorney. If you are going through a divorce, Stange Law Firm, PC can help. We have lawyers available to help you rebuild your life. When you retain our firm, you will receive access to your case through Your Case Tracker in addition to receiving your lawyer’s personal cell phone number. Call today to schedule your confidential consultation.

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The choice of a lawyer is an important decision that should not be based solely upon advertisements. Kirk Stange is respsonsible for the content. Principal place of business 120 South Central Ave, Suite 450, Clayton, MO 63105. Neither the Supreme Court of Missouri/Illinois nor The Missouri/Illinois Bar reviews or approves certifying organizations or specialist designations. Court rules do not permit us to advertise that we specialize in a particular field or area of law. The areas of law mentioned in this article are our areas of interest and generally are the types of cases which we are involved. It is not intended to suggest specialization in any areas of law which are mentioned The information you obtain in this advertisement is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice. You should consult an attorney for advice regarding your individual situation. We invite you to contact us and welcome your calls, letters and electronic mail. Contacting us does not create an attorney-client relationship. Past results afford no guarantee of future results and every case is different and must be judged on its merits.

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76 DINNER & A SHOW

Arts & Culture 78

79

ART AND SOUL

FEATURE: HEALTHY VALENTINE’S DAY

Hello to PHOTO BY SARAH CONROY

Herbie’s!

LadueNews.com | FEBRUARY 3, 2017

75


Dinner ...

Herbie’s

76

FEBRUARY 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

braised beef short rib, whether it’s atop roasted sweet potatoes and cabbage or the filling of sliders. The juicy, tender beef has always been part of the Balaban’s/ Herbie’s brand. The new location boasts a 110-seat patio, the largest in Clayton. Live music plays there a couple of nights a week, making Herbie’s not only a great place to gather for happy hour, which starts at 2 p.m. daily, but also a perfect restaurant to wine and dine before seeing The Year of the Bicycle at Upstream Theater. Herbie’s bar staff is known for their signature cocktails. A recent concoction is The Godfather Deux, a take on an Old-Fashioned with Buffalo Trace whiskey and Dumante liqueur, sugar, orange and cherry. Another popular drink is the Sugar Plum, with Pearl plum vodka, Velvet fallernum, Dolin blanc vermouth and lemon juice in a sugar-rimmed glass.

The adjectives comfortable, relaxed and professional nicely describe Herbie’s atmosphere. After opening the front door, adorned with a gold “H,” diners enter a throwback bar and lounge area, fixed with dark orange booths, large overhanging lamps and an impressive U-shaped bar. Deeper into the building lies the dining area, dimly lit with tables draped with white tablecloths. For dinner service, half of the tables are set aside for diners with reservations, while the bar and the other half of the tables serve walk-ins. “We like to consider ourselves the country club for everybody,” Teitelbaum says. “I teach my servers to be caregivers, not order-takers. We genuinely want people to walk away feeling like this is their home, that they belong here.” Aside from its dinner service, Herbie’s serves lunch on weekdays – something new for the Clayton location.

PHOTO BY SARAH CONROY

E

ven though Herbie’s has occupied its new Clayton location off Maryland and Brentwood for only two months, the dining venue has a long legacy. In 2008, Herbie’s owner, Aaron Teitelbaum, took over Café Balaban in the Central West End; the name Herbie’s pays tribute to Balaban’s founder, Herb Balaban Carp. “We have captured Herbie’s, Balaban’s and Cardwells, which used to be in this location, and also our first restaurant, Monarch,” Teitelbaum says. “There is a little bit of everything in this facility.” The description “a little bit of everything” also applies to the expansive menu, which Teitelbaum says is ever-evolving. From firecracker shrimp paired with chipotle aioli to a Margherita flatbread drizzled with a balsamic reduction and even a lobster salad, there’s something for everyone. Teitelbaum swears by Herbie’s

By Kaitlynn Martin


&The AYearShow of the Bicycle

PHOTO COURTESY OF PROPHOTOSTL‌

By Mark Bretz

Saturdays and Sundays are also busy, drawing a brunch crowd. For brunch, look for items like skillets loaded with sweet potatoes, roasted red peppers, caramelized onions and other vegetables. Bagels and lox, grilled steak or salmon and eggs, and three-stack pancakes with fresh berries and maple syrup round out the menu. From past to present, the Herbie’s brand is finding its home once again. For what’s to come, Teitelbaum says it best: “We are not in it for a sprint – we are in it for a marathon. We are not trying to just get you in for your reservation; we care about you coming back and back and back again.”

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Herbie’s, 8100 Maryland Ave., Clayton, 314-769-9595, herbies.com

‌Story:  Amelia and Andile, each 18 years old, suffer concussions at virtually the same time, miles apart. There’s more to their shared coincidence, though. Ten years earlier, they were childhood friends in their native South Africa. They were an unlikely pair, since Amelia came from an affluent family, while Andile was poverty-stricken. When Andile’s soccer ball ended up in Amelia’s yard one day, he gingerly worked his way past her dog to retrieve it. Amelia struck up a conversation, and soon the two became fast friends. They share a special bond when Amelia informs Andile that she’ll let him ride her shiny new bicycle. As the two take turns on it, their vivid imaginations take hold and forge a strong friendship that bridges their social gap. They were each 8 years old in 1997 and living in South Africa’s post-apartheid era. But even though the laws may have changed, race relations in the nation continue to be strained, and the two children eventually find themselves pulled in opposite directions. Can their friendship flourish, or will it eventually end up on the social trash heap in their country? Highlights:  Focused performances by Eric J. Conners and Magan Wiles help flesh out South African playwright Joanna Evans’ brief drama in Upstream Theater’s American premiere production. Other Info:  Upstream Theater, which strives to present plays “that move you, and move you to think,” has staged American premieres in two-thirds of the company’s 35 productions in its history. As artistic director Philip Boehm notes in the current presentation’s program, all of them have been “chosen for local impact.” Evans’ short work (a one-act effort that runs barely more than an hour) certainly doesn’t plow fresh ground. Strained race relations are nothing new, whether here in St. Louis in particular, in the United States in general or in South Africa. In fact, one of the latter nation’s most honored playwrights, Athol Fugard, has frequently written plays that explore that topic from sundry and penetrating perspectives. The Year of the Bicycle does succeed in showing how the innocence of children most often gives way to the often-cold indifference of adulthood, as the influence of Amelia’s haughty mother eventually takes control of her impressionable daughter. That which is precious to Andile seems trivial to his wealthy playmate. Boehm directs with a sure and careful hand, literally wrapping the performers inside a set where Conners takes a ball of red yarn and connects a series of red strings spread throughout Michael Heil’s spartan scenic design. The characters’ initial reference to the sky in which their comatose selves seem to be floating is emphasized in the celestially

painted floor judiciously illuminated by Tony Anselmo’s lighting design. Costume designer Laura Hanson dresses the two players in a bouncy dress for Amelia and simple play clothes for Andile, while prop designer Michael Dorsey offers a few well-placed pieces such as a soccer ball, bike handlebars and a double-tiered table in the center of the set where the two often contort their bodies as they reside in the ether beyond their memories. Both Wiles and Conners do a fine job conveying the childlike wonder and fertile imaginations of the 8-yearolds while also revealing at times the deeper emotional differences between the pair, with two varying accents. Wiles’ Amelia is cruelly indifferent to their imaginary little brother, in contrast to the joyful pleasure exhibited by Conners’ Andile about their ragtag sibling. Such subtle differences, which are resurrected in a pivotal scene late in the drama when Andile returns to Amelia’s home after a decade of absence, underscore the continuing distrust in their nation between people of two distinct colors. The Year of the Bicycle is interesting as far as it goes. This particular play, though, too often runs on the rims of an underinflated and too-familiar theme. Group:  Upstream Theater Venue:  Kranzberg Arts Center, 501 N. Grand Blvd., St. Louis Dates:  Feb. 3-5, 9-12 Tickets:  $20-$30; contact 314-669-6382 or upstreamtheater@sbcglobal.net Rating:  A 4 on a scale of 1-to-5

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LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   77


Soul

ART and

CAROL A. FLEMING

By Bryan A. Hollerbach | Image courtesy of Carol A. Fleming

To learn more about our featured artist, visit carolfleming.com St. Louis-area artists who wish to be considered for future installments of this monthly department of Ladue News should email inquiries to bhollerbach@laduenews.com with “Art and Soul” in the subject line.

78   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

J

örmungandr. To readers of a certain mythshadowed mind-set, the monoliths pictured here may well conjure that Norse name, which belongs to the world-girdling sea serpent instrumental in Ragnarök, the end of all existence. They seemingly pierce the earth and thrust skyward like gigantic fangs adorned with runic markings. Their creator, however, characterizes them in a much less malevolent light, if one still tinged with mystical overtones. “I call them Flame Columns,” Carol A. Fleming relates of the tripartite ceramic installation shown in an autumnal setting in Olivette, near Country Day School. “The client wanted something to celebrate life and living, and flame is like a banner of hope, reaching upward. “The client found me by knowing her neighbors, and they had my artwork. Word of mouth!” Often under the watchful eye of her adorable boxer, Caramella, Fleming has been creating such astonishing pieces of art for almost three decades from her Studio Terra Nova in Ladue. “I do site-sensitive projects, in response to the vision of clients,” she says, further characterizing the pictured installation, whose three components each rise roughly 9 feet, as slabrolled, brushed with glazes that Fleming herself mixed, scraped and gas-fired at 2,200 degrees Fahrenheit before being installed in 2013. “More recent works are out of town,” Fleming, who earned a Master of Fine Arts degree from Ohio University in Athens in 1988, adds. Also, beyond columnar constructs, her art often involves outsize acorns and egglike ovoidal solids, many of them almost as large as a classic Volkswagen Beetle. Courtesy of Craig Williams, a mind-boggling brief video – it runs all of 6:14 minutes thanks to masterly jump cuts – of Fleming at work during a five-day period appears online at vimeo.com/191113268. Background material from Fleming refers to the components of her pieces as being “muscularly rolled,” a claim the video substantiates; most if not all of the components depicted in Williams’ Vimeo short look as thick as pavers – a considerable quantity of clay. “It is a challenge to make tall columns twist,” she modestly relates. “Clay wants to go straight upward, like a vessel.” About the work of Fleming, who’s deeply religious, a quasi-mission statement from Studio Terra Nova also rhapsodizes, “Ever enduring the outdoor elements, / her sculptures stand, beckon, transport, refresh / the fulfilling faith of each in the other, / and reflect the joyful grace of her Maker.” Which, all things considered, seems a far more benevolent way of viewing both her work and the world than the focus of a Brobdingnagian monster with a hunger for planets.


LOVE LITE ‫ﬡ‬

The se five fl avorful , guilT-free de sserTs and snacks would be perfecT for valenTine’s day.

Story and photos by Sherrie Castellano

E

veryone loves a sweet treat around Valentine’s Day for a midwinter pick-me-up, something to make you feel special, both inside and out. Free of refined sugar, added color, preservatives, gluten, dairy, eggs, soy and most allergens – but full of flavor – the five desserts showcased here will do exactly that. Note that the omissions just listed don’t make these recipes inherently healthy, but in moderation, they certainly beat the typical sugary, rich treat that’s sure to be higher in calories, cholesterol, preservatives and chemicals that might leave you feeling less than your best. To start, the lemon-poppy seed fruit salad dishes out full, classic flavors that are light and bright, all topped with a tea-infused cream. The vanilla donuts are frosted with rich, coconut milk-based chocolate ganache and finished with a light sprinkle of cacao nibs and rose petals. The crisp is loaded with good-for-you ingredients like apples and cranberries. The hibiscus-blackberry sauce is loaded with antioxidants and full of vibrant flavor. Finally, the dark chocolate tart is so decadent and indulgent that no one will have a clue it’s both raw and vegan.

Lemon-Poppy Seed Fruit Salad With Earl Grey-Coconut Cream Serves | 4 | Earl Grey-Coconut Cream (yields 1 cup) ¼ cup filtered water 4 Earl Grey tea bags 1 Tbsp maple syrup ¼ tsp vanilla extract 1 cup coconut cream (cream skimmed from a refrigerated can of full-fat coconut milk) Fruit Salad 1 tsp poppy seeds 1 tsp maple syrup juice and zest from 1 lemon ⅛ tsp Himalayan pink salt 1 cup sliced mangoes (or other seasonal fruit) 1 cup fresh blackberries (or other seasonal fresh berries)

| Preparation – Earl Grey-Coconut Cream | Bring water to a boil, and steep tea for 5 minutes. Remove tea bags, squeezing liquid out gently. Refrigerate until chilled completely, about 10 minutes. Using an electric mixer, blend together chilled tea, maple syrup, vanilla and coconut cream until well-combined. Be careful not to overmix, or cream will be too loose. Set aside. | Preparation – Fruit Salad | In a small mixing bowl, whisk together poppy seeds, maple syrup, lemon juice and zest, and salt. Add fruit to serving bowl, pour mixture over and thoroughly combine, being sure to stir gently. Top with a dollop of Earl Grey-coconut cream, and serve. LadueNews.com | february 3, 2017

79


Macerated Hibiscus-Blackberry Sauce Yields | 2 cups | 1 2 ½ ⅛ 2

cup filtered water Tbsp loose-leaf hibiscus tea cup honey tsp sea or pink Himalayan salt cups fresh or frozen blackberries

| Preparation | In a small saucepan over high heat, bring water to a gentle boil, and remove from heat. Steep hibiscus tea for 5 minutes. Discard loose-leaf tea, leaving just strained hibiscus tea. Allow tea to cool for about 5 minutes, then add honey and salt, and stir to dissolve. Roughly chop blackberries and toss into hibiscus mixture. If using frozen berries, do not chop. Stir continuously for about 3 minutes until blackberries start to become soft and some moisture evaporates. Serve warm or cool over your favorite ice cream or yogurt.

Apple-Cranberry Crisp With White Wine and Olive Oil Serves | 8 | ¼ 1 ¾ ½ ¼ ⅛ 1 ½ 12 ¼ 1½ 1 ¼ ½ 1 1

cup organic cornstarch cup coconut sugar, divided tsp ground cinnamon tsp ground ginger tsp ground nutmeg tsp ground cloves cup sweet or dry white wine tsp salt, divided oz fresh cranberries cup plus 1 Tbsp olive oil, divided lbs Gala apples cup fine almond flour cup crushed almonds tsp baking soda tsp vanilla extract tsp lemon juice

| Preparation | Preheat oven to 375°F. In a small bowl, combine cornstarch, ¼ cup coconut sugar, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg and cloves. Set aside. In a large saucepan, combine white wine, ½ cup sugar and ¼ teaspoon salt. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Add cranberries, bring to boil again and allow to cook at a boil for 2 minutes. Turn off heat and add 1 tablespoon olive oil. Set mixture aside, allowing it to cool until slightly warm. While mixture is cooling, peel and thinly slice apples, and set aside. To make crisp topping, in a bowl, mix together remaining ¼ cup sugar, ¼ teaspoon salt, ¼ cup olive oil, almond flour, almonds and baking soda. Add 1 tablespoon of wine mixture from pan with cranberries to add moisture to batter. Stir vanilla and lemon juice into cranberry mixture, then stir in cornstarch mixture until completely combined. Pour apples into cranberry mixture, and toss lightly. Pour mixture into an 8- by 11-inch baking pan, and crumble crisp topping over top. Cover with foil and bake for 20 minutes. Remove foil and bake for 25 more minutes or until fruit is soft and bubbly and topping is golden-brown. Serve warm.

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february 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com


Vanilla Donuts With Chocolate Ganache Frosting Yields | 12 donuts | Vanilla Donuts vegetable cooking oil spray ¼ cup maple syrup ¾ cup unsweetened almond milk ¼ cup melted coconut oil 2 tsp vanilla extract ½ tsp sea salt 1½ cups gluten-free all-purpose flour 2½ tsp baking powder Chocolate Ganache 2 Tbsp maple syrup ½ cup raw cacao powder ½ cup full-fat coconut milk Assembly 1 Tbsp cacao nibs 1 Tbsp rose petals | Preparation – Vanilla Donuts | Preheat oven to 325°F, and lightly spray 2 donut pans with vegetable oil. In a mixing bowl, combine maple syrup, almond milk, coconut oil and vanilla, and set aside. In a large mixing bowl, whisk together salt, flour and baking powder. Pour in wet ingredients, and combine well, but be careful not to overmix. Distribute batter evenly into donut pans, and bake for 15 minutes. After donuts are done baking, remove from oven and allow to cool. | Preparation – Chocolate Ganache | In a mixing bowl, whisk all ingredients together until smooth. | Assembly | Dunk donuts in ganache frosting, and sprinkle lightly with cacao nibs and rose petals. Serve.

Raw Chocolate Tart With a Cashew-Coffee Crust Note that the raw cashews for the crust must be soaked for two hours before starting this recipe, so plan your timing accordingly. Yields | 10 slices | Cashew-Coffee Crust 1 cup raw cacao powder 1 cup full-fat or light coconut milk 1½ cups raw cashews, soaked for 2 hours ¼ cup raw honey or 3 Tbsp maple syrup 1 tsp vanilla extract ½ tsp sea salt

| Preparation – Cashew-Coffee Crust | In a food processor, combine all ingredients and pulse until finely ground and mixture starts to form into a ball.

Raw Chocolate Tart 1½ cups raw cashews 1 Tbsp extra-fine ground coffee or espresso 2 tsp raw cacao powder ¼ tsp sea salt 2 Tbsp coconut oil ½ Tbsp maple syrup

| Preparation – Raw Chocolate Tart | In a food processor, combine all ingredients and pulse until completely smooth. This could take a few minutes. Pour filling into crust, and chill in refrigerator for 1 hour.

Press crust mixture into bottom of a tart pan. Refrigerate until ready to fill.

Serve chilled or at room temperature.


Around Town

By Kaitlynn Martin

Sun., Feb. 5, Tue., Feb. 7, and Wed., Feb. 8

Patrick Conroy, a local Irish playwright, will pay tribute to the 100th anniversary of the Irish Revolution in his new production, ONE LAST JOB. The fictional story follows a “chance encounter of a young British soldier and a recently retired Irish Republican Army operative.” The play reflects on the notion that war defies easy answers. It will be performed at McGurk’s Irish Pub in Soulard. Showtimes vary. Tickets start at $20. 314-249-7488.

Tue., Feb. 7

Wed., Feb. 8

J. Rieger & Co. will host a LEFT FOR DEAD TASTING DINNER. The dinner is named after the new Left for Dead spirit created from discarded Boulevard beer. Andy Rieger, one owner of J. Rieger & Co., will lead the tasting event at Gamlin Whiskey House. A three-course dinner, accompanied by a variety of cocktails, will be served. $80. 6:30 p.m. gamlinwhiskeyhouse.com.

AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 MINUTES, a concert by Terry Barber, will take place at The Sheldon Concert Hall. Barber – an international tenor, countertenor and former member of Chanticleer – will sing classic songs in 10 languages, including “Danny Boy,” “La Vie en Rose” and more. $28. 7:30 p.m. 314-534-1111 or thesheldon.org.

Tue., Feb. 7, to Sun., Feb. 19

The Fabulous Fox Theatre presents SOMETHING ROTTEN! The comedic musical (deemed Broadway’s “hilarious new smash”) will be directed and choreographed by Casey Nicholaw, who is known for his work with The Book of Mormon and Aladdin. The musical “tells the story of brothers Nick and Nigel Bottom, two playwrights stuck in the shadow of that Renaissance rock star, Will Shakespeare.” Showtimes vary. Tickets start at $25. 314-534-1111 or fabulousfox.com.

Fri., Feb. 10, to Sun., May 21

The Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum at Washington University will kick off its new exhibition, “SPECTACLE AND LEISURE IN PARIS: DEGAS TO MUCHA.” Prints, posters, photographs and film, some that have never been viewed by the public before, will be on display. These items explore the Belle Époque, which translates as “beautiful era” and is known as the period of Western European history from 1871 to around 1914. 314-935-5230 or wustl.edu.

82

FEBRUARY 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

Wed., Feb. 8, to Sun. March 5

The Repertory Theatre of St. Louis continues to celebrate its 50th season with its adaptation of TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD. Harper Lee’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel will come to life onstage, depicting a Depression-era Alabama where characters struggle for justice and learn of the power of empathy. Risa Brainin will direct the performances. Showtimes vary. Tickets start at $18. 314-968-4925 or repstl.org.

Sat., Feb. 4

The International Photography Hall of Fame and Museum will host a lecture by Stan Strembicki entitled “PHOTOGRAPHING LARGE EVENTS/MARDI GRAS.” Strembicki is known for photographing the last 24 Fat Tuesday bashes in New Orleans. His work has been displayed across the U.S. and Europe. Free for museum members; $5 for nonmembers. 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. 314-535-1999 or iphf.org.

Thu., Feb. 9

Left Bank Books will present author and investigator Steven LaChance and his new book Confrontation With Evil: An In-Depth Review of the 1949 Possession That Inspired The Exorcist, at a BOOK DISCUSSION AND SIGNING. LaChance’s book digs deeply into what’s known as “the 1949 St. Louis exorcism.” This story of Roland Doe, a possessed child, became the foundation of the book and the film The Exorcist. The event is free and open to the public, but proof of book purchase from Left Bank is required to enter the signing line. 7 p.m. 314-367-6731 or left-bank.com.


A SPECIAL

Arts & Culture

PROMOTION

Dining & Entertainment

Katie’s Pizza & Pasta Osteria has a busy year planned, with the opening of a second location and the launch of a new company, Vero Pasto. The dynamic duo of Katie and Ted Collier plan to open their second restaurant, in Town and Country, by late May and also are hard at work on meal-kit company Vero Pasto, which will bring the restaurant’s recipes into their customers’ homes. To learn more, call 314-942-6555 or visit katiespizzaandpasta.com.

LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   83


DINING & ENTERTAINMENT: Feature Story

go

BIin BIG KATIE’S PIZZA & PASTA OSTErIA

Going T

his year is going to be big for Katie’s Pizza & Pasta Osteria. The wellknown Italian restaurant is expanding, with a second location coming to Town and Country. Katie Collier, who owns the restaurant with her husband, Ted, says the duo had always envisioned multiple locations when they opened the flagship restaurant in Rock Hill. “We have always had a mindset of expansion,” she says. “We wanted to have multiple locations and grow the brand.” For the past two years, the Colliers have been looking all over St. Louis for the perfect spot. They looked in the Central West End and in Creve Coeur, but nothing clicked. “We needed a very specific spot with an unusual amount of square footage,” Katie Collier says.

84

201 2017

“We wanted space for a big patio, a garden and great parking. It was hard to find that.” After months of looking, they found the perfect spot: 14173 Clayton Road in Town and Country. “It’s a great space,” Katie Collier says. “It won’t look the same [as the Manchester Road flagship], but the feel will be the same.” Collier says she and Ted learned a lot since they opened their Rock Hill location. “We never expected to be as busy as we are,” she says. “This new location will have more seating and will offer the same menu as the Rock Hill location.” Though both locations will offer the same menu at the same time, the menus are constantly changing. Katie Collier says the menu for spring will be premiering in April. The Colliers hope to open the Town and Country location in late May, as of right now.

FEBRUARY 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com | A lAdUE nEws spEciAl pRomotion

By Robyn Ro Dexter Photo o courtesy cour of Katie’’s Pizza & Pasta Osteria

In the meantime, they’ve also launched a company called Vero Pasto, which focuses on meal kits. They’re currently building a center in Creve Coeur to house the company. “Vero Pasto features our pizza and pasta. You can order online, and we’ll send you kits with our dough and fresh pasta that we make in-house,” Katie Collier says. “It’ll be different recipes every week, so you can order à la carte or sign up to be part of the club.” They’re hoping to launch the meal kits in the next few months. “This is just another great way for us to reach more people and expand the brand,” Katie Collier says. “We have a lot of other things in the works for this year, and we can’t wait to announce those soon!” 9568 Manchester Road, Rock Hill, 314-942-6555, katiespizzaandpasta.com


diningGuide

‌THE ART OF ENTERTAINING 8796 Big Bend Blvd., 314-963-9899, theaofe.com Time is still left on the clock for you to stock up on appetizers for the big game. Deliver a winning buffet at your Super Bowl party!

BARRISTER’S

GIOVANNI’S KITCHEN

7923 Forsyth Blvd., 314-726-5007,

8831 Ladue Road, 314-721-4100,

barristersinclayton.com

giovanniskitchenstl.com

With the largest selection of craft beer in Clayton and 30-

Spice up your workweek with the perfect lunch escape at

plus bloody mary options for brunch, you won’t want to

Giovanni’s Kitchen, close to downtown Clayton. See what

miss out. Barrister’s – not your typical pub fare, not your

everyone in the Lou keeps talking about at this award-

typical sports bar!

winning Italian restaurant.

EVANGELINE’S BISTRO AND MUSIC HOUSE 512 N. Euclid Ave., 314-367-3644, evangelinesstl.com Experience a taste of New Orleans right here in the Central West End. Red beans and rice, gumbo, jambalaya, classic drinks and live house music await. Laissez les bon temps rouler!

FRAZER’S RESTAURANT & LOUNGE 1811 Pestalozzi St., 314-773-8646, frazersgoodeats.com Experience Frazer’s, an anchor in St. Louis’ historic Benton Park since 1992. With its private dining packages and globally inspired menu, all your future gatherings already are taken care of.

GUIDO’S “ON THE HILL” 5046 Shaw Ave., 314-771-4900, guidosstl.com Discover a sensational union of flavors as Spain and Italy unite on the menu at Guido’s “On The Hill.” Savor fusion favorites and popular Italian dishes, best washed down with house-made sangria.

A LADUE NEWS SPECIAL PROMOTION  |  LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   85


HAVELI INDIAN RESTAURANT 9720 Page Ave., 314-423-7300, havelistl.com

Indulge in authentic Indian cuisine, with temptations made of curries from fresh, natural ingredients. With lunch and dinner buffets available daily, come see the hospitality traditions of India for yourself.

REVEL KITCHEN

8388 Musick Memorial Drive, 314-647-2222, eatrevelkitchen.com Get tasty, nutritious meals delivered to your door. Revel Kitchen has comprehensive meal plans to help you lose weight, gain muscle or simply stay on track. Don’t just eat food, Revel in it.

HERBIE’S

8100 Maryland Ave., 314-769-9595, herbies.com Herbie’s move to Clayton gives the opportunity to perfect the way it cares for guests at lunch and dinner, plus weekend brunches. Now open, come in to the place where you’re already a regular!

IL BEL LAGO

11631 Olive Blvd., 314-994-1080, bellagostl.com

TRUFFLES & BUTCHERY

9202 Clayton Road, 314-567-9100, todayattruffles.com

Il Bel Lago consistently delivers excellent cuisine in a casual elegant atmosphere. From personal dinners to

Butchery, Truffles’ meat market, in addition to a full

private dining rooms, this dining experience will instantly

butcher service, offers fantastic takeout, fresh seafood

make you a fan.

and sandwiches, daily gluten-free breads, prepared meals, select wines and local brews, catering and so much more.

86   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com  |

A LADUE NEWS SPECIAL PROMOTION


In accordance with the federal Fair Housing Act, we do not accept for publication any real estate listing that indicates any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, disability, family status, or national origin. If you believe a published listing states such a preference, limitation, or discrimination, please notify this publication at fairhousing@lee.net.

ELECTRICAL Licensed Bonded Insured

Commercial Residential Industrial

314-773-4955 or 314-966-3388 www.fielderelectricalservices.com Residential Fielder is highly skilled in knob & tube wiring and aluminum wiring upgrades. We are specialists in older and existing structures.

CONTACT US TODAY FOR AN APPOINTMENT

ACCOUNTING/TAXES QQQQQQQQQQ Personal Income Taxes Business Accounting and Taxes Free Pick-up/Delivery. 30 Years Experience. J-C Accounting 314-305-1993

If it can be wired, we can wire it.

CHILDCARE SERVICES

EXP. NANNY Seeking to care for your little ones evenings, weekends and overnights. Excellent references. Call Cathy 636-675-3356

CLEANING SERVICES

CLEAN AS A WHISTLE Affordable Cleaning for Any Budget Weekly, Bi-weekly, Monthly

HEALTHCARE SERVICES

ELECTRICAL

Commercial Tenant finishes, churches, sporting complexes, restaurants, senior care facility, and parking lot lighting, etc.

Fielder has the skills, knowledge and equipment to handle industrial work including new industrial construction, warehouse lighting, large machinery, and data wiring.

$20.00 off

Any electrical job of $75.00 or more

CLEANING SERVICES

FOR THE HOME

ppppppppppppppp DETAILED CLEANING BY POLISH WOMAN Plus: laundry, ironing and organizing closets. Weekly or Bi-weekly. Call 314-757-1881

FURNITURE Fine Thomasville dining room set w/ leaves, serving cart on wheels, 2 buffets (1 w/marble top), & 8 chairs; $500. Baby Grand piano & bench-Estey; $300. 314-997-4312

GUTTERS

Move-in and Move Out Satisfaction Guaranteed

Family Owned & Operated

Call 314-426-3838

$10 OFF New Customer SCRUBBY DUTCH CLEANING Family Owned and Operated Since 1983 Bonded • Insured • Supervised $10 OFF 1st Time Customers Free Estimates by Phone 314-849-4666 or 636-926-0555 www.scrubbydutch.com

Service at your home: Transfer data to new PCs Fix problems with current PCs Day, evenings, weekends available

Call Mike at 636-675-7641

New Installation, Cleaning & Repair Drainage Solutions, Screen Installation & Window Cleaning Professional, Reliable & Insured Q No Mess Left Behind Q FREE Estimates

HOME CARE Experience w/Stroke, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's & Hospice Patients.

12hr Shifts•Days/Nights•Live-in Car, Insurance, Personal Care, Exceptional Worker, Trustworthy, Doctor Ref's, 30yrs Avail. NOW!

Call Mary or Sharon 314-276-8891 Leave Message

Quality Care for Less! Semi-retired RN willing to work as caregiver. Experience w/ Cancer, Stroke, Dementia, Hospice & Parkinson. Companionship, Shopping, Doctors visits. Janice 314-651-1345 SINCE 1987

SENIORS HOME CARE

CAREGIVER Thorough, mature, quality-skilled in home care/companionship. Non Smoker. Avail. FT/Live-in. Call Terri today 314-369-7277

HELP WANTED

thegutterguy-stl@hotmail.com

AccuCare needs Caregivers! AccuCare, RN-owned and managed home health care provider, has immediate openings for caregivers. Contact Jane Olsen at jolsen@accucare.com or 314-472-3393

ESTATE SALES The VAULT

PRECISION REMODELING Room Additions, Decks, Bathrooms, Kitchens and so much more. Interior & Exterior. Free Estimates! Fully Insured. Call Bob (314) 799-4633 or Jim (314) 799-4630 REPAIR IT BEFORE YOU REPLACE IT Carpet Repaired, Restretched, Installed, New Carpet Sales, Large Selection in 2 Showrooms. Over 30 Years Experience. For a Quote Call Nick 314-845-8049

REMODEL & REPAIR Rotted Wood, Painting, Tile, Drywall, Floors, Electrical, Carpentry, Plumbing. Insured. Free Est. 40yrs Exp. Don Phillips 314-973-8511

LAWN & GARDEN

3 hr. to 24/7 in-home assistance. Experience the difference the moment we answer the phone. CALL ANYTIME 314.962.2666

Contact Tony 314-413-2888

www.STLpcguy.com

Plaster Patching & Repair Interior & Exterior Walls, ceilings & crown molding. (DRYVIT, EIFS SYSTEM repairs & new application) Also drywall, taping & repairs. 220th ENGINEER'S, LLC 314-220-3638

314-569-9890

Industrial

Need An Electrician?

COMPUTER SERVICES

24/7 Companion Care for Seniors. Personal Care, Meal Prep, Light Housekeeping, and Peace of Mind.

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Landscape Design, Installation & Maintenance NOW ADDING NEW CUSTOMERS FOR 2017 Complete Estate Management Maintenance: ï Mowing ï Mulching ï Plantings ï Bed Work ï Drainage Solutions ï Seed and Sod ï Annual Turf Care Packages Outdoor Living: ï Patios ï Fire Features ï Retaining Walls ï Water Features ï Native Landscapes ï Driveways and Walkways Call Today for Estimate

Luxury Resale CHAMBERMAIDS, LLC 314-724-1522 Excellent Cleaning at Affordable Rates Satisfaction Guaranteed Q Now Hiring Call To Inquire Q

Dazey Housecleaning Established in 1997 Call Linda 314-898-3524 Crystal Clean is a reliable cleaning team, very detailed oriented to ensure your home is CRYSTAL CLEAN. Call us today for a FREE Estimate 314-266-8215 Home Cleaning Professional 10+ Years Experience Insured & Bonded Call Neide 314-974-2281

Nationally Recognized Resale For Over 30 Years Now Seeking Jewelry, Handbags & Clothing

314-827-5664 HOME IMPROVEMENT

www.TRCoutdoor.com

Call Today 314-736-6511 A Paint & Patina Estate Sale Town & Country 2520 Oak Springs Lane Sat 2/4 9A-3P Sun 2/5 10A-3P www.paintandpatinastl.com

FLOORING/TILE HARDWOODZ Specializing in Installation, Sanding and Refinishing of Hardwood Floors. Call for FREE Estimate Dave 314-267-1348

FIREWOOD GUTTERS Isn't It Good Delivered Wood? Seasoned hickory and oak, 4 x 8, $120. Quantity discounts. Oak mulch available, #38 cu.yd. spread. Free Estimates. 573-517-1775

HANDYMAN SERVICES MIKE'S QUALITY HOME SERVICE & REPAIR Flooring • Carpentry • Plumbing Electrical • Kitchens & Baths Garage Doors Installed & Repaired 20yrs Experience • Ref's

Complete Home, Kitchen & Bath Remodeling, Finish Basements, Room Additions, Brick & Stone Work, Flooring, Gutters, Painting, Power washing, Decks, Windows

Mike 314-265-4568

(314) 359-0476

Fully Insured Work Guaranteed JON'S AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR Electrical, Carpentry, Floors, Windows, Plumbing, Painting, Tile and Lots More! Quality Guaranteed! Reasonable, Insured, Ref's NO JOB TOO SMALL! 314-205-1555 www.jonshomerepair.com

THE LIST GOES ON!

FREE ESTIMATES

KEN SINGLETON TUCKPOINTING • Brickwork • Stonework • Plaster • Drywall • Painting • Carpentry • Siding • Gutters • Roofing • Chimney Leaks; Stopped Guaranteed.

Call Ken 636-674-5013

Complete Lawn Maintenance for Residential & Commercial Leaf Cleanup and Vacuuming, Fertilizing, Planting, Sodding, Seeding, Mowing, Mulching, Edging, Spraying, Weeding, Pruning, Trimming, Bed Maintenance, Dethatching, Brush Removal, Retaining Walls, Paver Patios and Drainage Work. Licensed Landscape Architect/Designer For a Free Estimate Call 314-426-8833 www.mplandscapingstl.com

LadueNews.com | February 3, 2017   87


LAWN & GARDEN Time for Some

Hard Work Yard Work SPRING LANDSCAPING

PET SERVICES The Purr'fect Pet Sitter Insured & Bonded Daily Visits, Day Care & Pet Taxi Service *NAPPS* member Call Rachel 636-675-4114 or wix.com/tpurrfectps/Rachels-pet-sitting

Landscape Design • Spring Clean-Up Brush Clearing • Bed Preparation • Tilling Weeding & Mulching • Planting Tree/Shrub Fertilization,Trimming and Removal • Lawn Fertilization, Weed Control, De-Thatching, Sodding and Seeding • Gutter Cleaning • Power Washing • Stone Walls, Patios, Borders and Drainage Solution.

The Hard Work Yard Work Co. LLC For Free Estimates call Keith at 314-422-0241 or e-mail at

hwyardwork@aol.com Since 2001

Yucko's Your Poop Scoop 'n Service Free Estimates - No Contracts

314-770-1500 www.yuckos.com

REAL ESTATE SERVICES Fresh Start Realty can get you up to $9,000 in down pymt/ closing cost assistance. We have several new 2017. 1st-time home buyer programs. Call Fresh Start Realty now 314-337-1230

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT Grass Cutting • Fertilize Grass Complete Maintenance Snow Removal Brick and Stone Work Irrigation Call George 314-567-6066 OUTDOOR CREATIVE DESIGN & LANDSCAPE, LLC For all of your landscape and hardscape needs. "Where dreams become design and design becomes reality" 314-325-5111 OutdoorCreativeDesign.com Polo's Lawn & Landscape, Inc. Retaining Walls, Paver Patios, Leaf and Snow Removal, Backyard Cleanup, Trees & Sod. Staining Decks by brush. Free Estimates. 314-280-2779

PAINTING ASTON - PARKER PAINTING Interior/Exterior Painting Wallpaper Removal Insured, 35 Years Experience Free Estimates Call 314-766-2952 or 314-766-2962 alstonparker@hotmail.com

Ladue #3 Bennington 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, Full Bsmt and 2 Car Garage. AS IS - $2200/mo

Call 314-973-7688

SERVICES $ CASH 4 OLD STUFF $ ——Light Hauling—— We Cleanup, Haul Away and/or purchase: Garage, Estate and Moving Sales! Also, Warehouse, Business & Storage Locker Leftovers! FAY FURNITURE 618-271-8200 AM

314-963-3416 simplemovesstl.com MCGREEVY PIANO "Get Tuned for 2017" Bill McGreevy, Piano Technician Guild Associate Member 314-335-9177 wrmcgreevy@gmail.com I BRIAN'S HAULING J "U Name It & We Haul It" 7 Days a Week - Same Day Appliances, Brush, Clean Outs, Demo, Basement & Garage, Etc. Call Brian @ 314-740-1659

TREES

Tree Pruning & Removal, Plant Healthcare Program, Deadwooding, Stump Grinding, Deep Root Fertilization, Cabling & Storm Cleanup Cary Semsar ISA Board Certified Master ArboristOH-5130B Free Estimate, Fully Insured

Call 314-426-2911 meyertreecare.com

Tim Peters 636-379-5190

ROOFING Tree Service Professionals Trimming, Deadwooding, Reduction, Removals, Stump Grinding, Year Round Servicebaum & Fully Insured Call Michael Baumann for a Free Estimate & Property Inspection

636.375.2812 INTERIOR PAINTING & REMODELING, Finish carpentry, drywall, tile and floor work. 25 yrs experience. Call Kent for free estimates 314-3982898 kenthallowell@yahoo.com

JC PAINTS Interior & Exterior Painting Reliable, Clean, Reasonable & Insured. Call John for a Free Estimate Today! 314-703-2794 jcpaints@sbcglobal.net

ACCOUNTING/TAXES SENIOR SERVICES HVAC

You'll be glad you called!

Firstsearch Home Care for Seniors

Trees Trimmed & Removed

Serving the West County Area Personal Care for Seniors Electronics Set Up * Small Repairs Groceries * Errands * TV Remotes General Helping Hands Please let us know what you need!

GILLS

314.599.1963 References on request

88   February 3, 2017 | LadueNews.com

TUCKPOINTING

Marco Tuckpointing Spot or Entire Home Winter Interior Work Special Color Match Experts Basement Leaks Power Washing Above and Below Grade Waterproofing Concrete and Flatwork Owner on site to insure CUSTOMER SATISFACTION. No Job Too Small • 35yrs Exp. Senior Discount • Fully Insured

WANTED VINTAGE COLLECTIBLES Movie & Music Memorabilia ï Old Advertising ï Vintage Clothing Sports Memorabilia ï Old Toys St.L History ï Bulk Collections 314-518-5769 benfine9@gmail.com SERIOUS COLLECTOR & HISTORIAN Will Pay Top $ for WWII Military Relic's. Swords, Daggers, Metals, Badges, Hats, Helmets, Flags & Guns. 314-249-5369

314-365-4241 MASSEY TUCKPOINTING & MASONRY

$50 off $500+ 314-486-3303 masseytuckpointing.com Mirelli Tuckpointing LLC Solid Tuckpointing and Spotpointing w/Color Match. Chimney, Stone, Caulking, Brick Repair & Waterproofing. Q Q Free Estimates Q Q 314-645-1387

TUCKPOINTING Chimney Repair, Glass Blocks, Brick Block, Stone & Stucco. Waterproofing. Insured. 40 Yrs Experience. Free Estimates. 314-910-3132 636-797-2947

US Army Engineers KATHY ARNOLD Painting and Remodeling 40yrs of a Women's Touch Int./Ext Painting & Carpentry Free Estimates & Color Consult. Look us up on Facebook. Call Kathy 314-324-6255 Kathy@Kathy-Arnold.com

WANTED CHINESE ANTIQUES BUYING SNUFF BOTTLE COLLECTIONS JADE & BRONZE ITEMS SIGNED PORCELAIN 314-503-4847

Tuckpointing, Chimney & Brick Repair, Caulking & Now Chimney Sweeping & Flue Re-lining. Winner of 2013 BBB Torch Award. Complete Tree Service for Residential & Commercial

Take on any roof! Slate, Clay Tile & Shingles. Also Soffit, Fascia, Gutter Repairs and Gutter Cleaning. Over 30yrs Exp. Fully Insured. No house too tall & No job too small 220th ENGINEER'S, LLC 314-220-3638

Get'er Done Tree Service A+ with BBB and Angie's List Tree Trimming, Removal, Deadwooding and Stump Grinding. Certified Arborist. Fully Insured, Free Estimates. Serving the area since 2004. 314-971-6993

WANTED

SIMPLE MOVES We Specialize In Small Moves. We charge by the hour or the piece, house to house or room to room. Bonded & Insured. Packing Available.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

14773 Brook Hill, Chesterfield Gorgeous 2 story in sought after Brook Hill Estates. Features include gleaming hardwood floors, custom millwork, hearth/sun room, updated fixtures & iron spindled grand staircase. Over 4,000 sq. ft. unbelievably priced at $710,000... thousands below recent appraisal!

TREES

TREE SERVICE • Stone Retaining Walls • Stump Grinding • Fully Insured

(636) 274-1378

Ladue News Classified... your trusted local source for merchandise, services and real estate

for over 31 years. To place an ad, call: 314-269-8810 email: classified@laduenews.com

LADUE NEWS CLASSIFIEDS


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Thursday, March 2, 2017

6-9pm | Palladium Saint Louis Tickets $40 | $45 at door To purchase tickets, go to

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